The result of the
National Assembly election declared by the Independent National
Electoral
Commission on Tuesday has pushed the opposition All Progressives Congress to
the majority status in the 109 membership Senate.
Before the
election, the Peoples Democratic Party enjoyed the majority status in the red
chamber with 64 members while the APC has 41. Other parties, like the Labour
Party, the Accord Party and the Social Democratic Party, shared the remaining
five seats.
The APC will now
have 64 senators; the PDP, 45; and the Labour Party, one.
The development,
our correspondent observed, will obviously alter the configuration of the
Senate leadership in the 8th Senate which would be inaugurated in June this
year, because the opposition APC which is currently in the minority, would
constitute the principal officers.
For instance, the
current Senate President, David Mark who is returning to the Senate for the
fifth time, will lose his seat to an APC member while the change in gear will
also affect other principal officers like the Deputy Senate President, Senate
Leader, Deputy Senate Leader, Chief Whip; and Deputy Chief Whip.
Apart from Mark
and his deputy, Ike Ekweremadu who won the election to return to the Senate,
other principal officers like the Senate Leader, Victor Ndoma -Egba; his
deputy, Abdul Ningi; Chief Whip, Bello Gwarzo; and his deputy, Hosea Agboola,
all lost their bid to return.
The current
configuration is set to automatically transform the status of the APC members,
especially the principal officers from minority to the majority.
For instance, the
Minority Leader, Senator George Akume, according to sources, may likely emerge
the new senate president, although some of his colleagues believed that another
ranking senator should be elected since Mark, his kinsman from Benue man, would
be relinquishing the seat after eight years.
APC wins 64 seats in Senate
Reviewed by Unknown
on
Wednesday, April 01, 2015
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