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Civil Society Groups React To Buhari’s Withholding of Assent to Electoral Bill Amendment

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On Tuesday 21st December 2021, the Senate President and Speaker of the House of Representatives read a letter from President Buhari communicating his decision to withhold assent to the Electoral Bill 2021 transmitted to him more than a month ago on 19th November 2021.

Several Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) have expressed sadness and expressed their disappointment at the development.

According to them, “The withholding of assent by the President to a bill that relevant electoral stakeholders have spent enormous time and resources to put together undermines public
confidence and trust in the electoral system.

“More disappointing is the fact that the President delayed his response until the effluxion of time required for assenting to legislation until the date that the National Assembly is proceeding for the Christmas and New Year holiday.

“The President’s decision to withhold assent to the Bill will have serious implication for INEC as it prepares for the FCT Area Council election, the Ekiti and Osun governorship elections, and ultimately the 2023General
Election”, they insisted.

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The CSOs maintained that the “non-conclusion of the electoral amendment process will mean that these elections will be conducted
using the Electoral Act 2010 (as amended) denying INEC the opportunity to test the efficacy of some of the new innovations introduced in the proposed Electoral Bill 2021.

“This is apart from the delay the Commission will have to contend with in the required effort to review its guidelines, regulations and manuals in accordance with certain provisions of the Bill.

“Furthermore, based on the revised timelines for specific electoral activities in the Bill, INEC and other stakeholders will have to grapple with logistical, financial, and programmatic difficulties in the run-up to the 2023 General Election.

“We reckon that this may not bode well for Nigeria’s electoral democracy, hence the clamor for the speedy conclusion of the electoral reform process.

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“It must be emphasized that the successful conduct of any election is predicated on the certainty and clarity of the election legal framework, amongst other factors.

“This is to preclude any uncertainties that may occasion
manipulation and subversion of the electoral process.

“It is for this reason that the African Charter on Democracy, Elections, and Good Governance and the ECOWAS Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance requires that any amendment to the electoral legal framework be concluded at least six months to the election date”, the CSOs noted.

To avert further complications and logjam in the efforts to strengthen the electoral process, the CSOs strongly recommended that “The National Assembly as a matter of national emergency should either override the President’s decision
or remove the contentious clause (s) from the Bill and transmit the Bill back to the President for assent within the next 30 days.”

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The also recommended that the National Assembly should ensure that all clerical, editorial, and cross-referencing gaps in the current Bill are resolved before transference back to the President.

They urged the President to “expeditiously assent to the revised Bill upon receipt from the National Assembly.”

The CSOs urged other Civil society groups, media, and development partners to sustain the effort “to protect the will of the people and safeguard the electoral reform process from policy capture and manipulation.”

The CSOs include Yiaga Africa, International Press Centre (IPC), Centre for Citizens with Disability (CCD), Albino Foundation, CLEEN Foundation, Institute for Media and Society (IMS), Nigerian Women Trust Fund (NWTF), and the Premium Times Centre for Investigative Journalism (PTCIJ).

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Comrade James Ezema is a veteran journalist and media consultant. He is a political strategist. He can be reached on +2348035823617 via call or WhatsApp.

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