By Tony Edike
ENUGU—Deputy Senate President, Ike Ekweremadu explained weekend, that Senators’ demand for the ruling Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) to ensure continuity in the Senate was not a call for automatic ticket for members of the upper House, but a move to copy the best practices in the world.
He said that the Senators were misrepresented on the issue, which if given consideration, would reduce cost and enhance quality legislation at the apex legislative chamber.
Speaking with reporters in Enugu, Ekweremadu said that with the growth and progress so far recorded by the Nigerian Senate, time was now ripe to look into such measures, insisting that the call was not out place, as most civilized countries like Canada even appoint Senators for life. He said that prolonged tenure for the Senators would ensure continued development and stability of the country.
He said, “in America where we drew the bulk of the provisions of our constitution, you don’t just change parliamentarians.
You don’t change parliamentarians all the time because a lot is spent on training these people. And when you send people to seminars, trainings, workshops and they sit in parliament from year to year and at the end of the day, they don’t return, those monies are wasted.
“So, we are saying that as much as possible and as much as our system can accommodate, that we reverse this trend. A situation where about 80 per cent of our Senators don’t return is not healthy for our system. If we can turn it the other way and say, let 20 per cent not return, let 80 per cent return, I think that is the path of growth.â€
Senator Ekweremadu, who is the Chairman of the National Assembly Joint Committee on Constitutional Review, said, “when making the 1999 constitution, our leaders thought it wise to say in parliament, there is no term limit, you contest and win and then come back to parliament as many times as you can. I think they were not stupid because they knew the implication.
They knew how much is invested in training these people. They knew the need to have parliamentarians stay longer in parliament because it creates what is called institutional memory because being a Senator for 20 years or 30 years, you would have seen Presidents come and go. So, if an issue arises in the country that requires institutional memory, you have to fall back to such people, that is what our mates have in mind.â€
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