Ekweremadu, govs renew hope on devolution of powers
— 28th September 2017
From: BENEDICT ODINAKA writing for ODOGWU MEDIA.
Governors of the 36 states of the federation and the
Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu, have renewed hope of a likely
revisit of the devolution of powers by the National Assembly.
Ekweremadu, who is chairman of the Constitution Review
Committee and the governors, debated this, when he briefed the Nigeria
Governors Forum (NGF), on the ongoing constitution amendment exercise.
Ekweremadu, who met with the Forum at the Presidential
Villa, on Wednesday night, said the National Assembly had not given up
on the proposed amendments of Second Schedule, Part I & II to move
certain items, such as railway and power, to the Concurrent Legislative
List to give more legislative powers to states.
“Besides making governance difficult, concentration of so
much power at the centre fuels the struggle for federal power. We
believe that devolving some power to the States will improve good
governance and also make the centre less attractive,” Ekweremadu
stressed.
He explained that of the 33 bills in the proposed
amendments, 21 were passed by the Senate and House of Representatives,
while 12 failed to scale through.
Ekweremadu, however, explained that efforts were on to
build consensus around some of the failed bills, especially the bill on
devolution of powers, with a view to revisiting it to unbundle and make
the Federal Government more efficient.
On the concerns that it was an aberration of Federalism
for states’ Houses of Assembly and the Local Governments to draw
revenues directly from the Federation Account, Ekweremadu explained that
amendments towards financial autonomy for both tiers of governments
only seeks to alter Section 162 of the Constitution to abrogate the
State Joint Local Government Accounts and create the Consolidated
Revenue Fund of the State from which all allocations due to the Local
Government Councils and the State Assemblies shall be directly paid from
the Federation Account.
The federal lawmaker also said the proposed amendments
would guarantee the democratic existence, funding, and tenure of local
government councils.
He said that financial autonomy for local governments
would not return primary education to the era of unpaid salaries. He
explained that although education remained the constitutional
responsibilities of the local governments, provisions had been made to
deduct, from source, the monthly financial obligations of the Local
Governments to primary education for remission into the account of state
agencies overseeing basic education.
The lawmaker further maintained that altering Section 134
and 179of the Constitution would avail the Independent National
Electoral Commission, INEC, sufficient time for INEC to conduct
bye-elections; and section 225 to empower it to de-register political
parties was not total.
“INEC’s power to deregister parties will apply strictly to
non-fulfilment of certain conditions such as breach of registration
requirements and failure to secure/win either a Presidential,
Governorship, Local Government chairmanship or a seat in the National or
State Assembly or a Councilorship seat.
“Bill No. 10, seeks to alter sections 58, 59 and 100 only
seeks to resolve the usual situation where the President or Governor
neglects to signify his/her assent to or veto of a bill from the
legislature.
“So, the President or Governor will now have 30 days to
signify his/her assent/veto rather than keep everyone in endless
suspense, while passed bills gather dust in the shelf. In the United
States, the Constitution provides for only two weeks. So, the intent is
to enable timely passage of laws for good governance.”
SENATE TO REVISIT DEVOLUTION OF POWERS.
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Thursday, September 28, 2017
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