Editorial
Averting Legislature, Executive Impasse
The fragile working understanding between the executive arm of government and Nigeria’s legislature, especially the lower chamber of the National Assembly, the House of Representatives risks further estrangement unless both arms demonstrate tact, maturity and understanding in handling issues of national interest.
Recently, the House of Representatives summoned the President and Commander-in-Chief of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, Dr Goodluck Jonathan to appear before it and provide answers to the growing insecurity in the land. The House, like most Nigerians are troubled by the seeming helplessness of the federal government in checking the excesses of the Islamic fundamentalist group, Boko Haram.
On the last count, the Islamist group is said to have killed more than 1,000 citizens and foreigners in numerous terror attacks on public institutions including media houses and the United Nations House in Abuja , Nigeria’s Seat of power, since 2009.
Only last weekend, three such attacks on Churches in Kaduna and Yobe left scores dead and many more in reprisal attacks. With as many as 101 reportedly killed and further threat of sectarian violence, the Kaduna State government has again imposed dusk to dawn curfew which it relaxed two days after last Sunday’s terror attacks on churches.
These killings, no doubt portend great danger to national security and indeed the unity of Nigeria and ought to attract commited action by all concerned, particularly, the federal and state governments which have the constitutional duty to protect lives and properties of the citizenry.
Surely, it was for this same concern that the House of Representatives summoned President Jonathan to appear, ostensibly to explain what the executive arm has, thus far, done to check the excesses of the Boko Haram menace. It is, even more so, because of the religious colouration now being introduced into what initially seemed a misguided rascality by a group of miscreants opposed to modern education which many thought Boko Haram represented.
However, the stance of the House that the president must personally appear before it and not to be represented by anyone else appears to be a bit over-reaching. The president of the country is the Chief Security Officer, but depends on briefs by constitutionally recognised officials to function.
Any where in the world, a democratically elected president enjoys the right of being represented by proxy and ought not be pressured into responding to only an aspect of countless variables responsible for a peaceful and progressive country.
In the United States of American (USA), for instance, the president’s visit to Congress is either ceremonial or discretional and never based on orders. Even so, the president enjoys the constitutional privilege of assigning the affected officials to represent him in similar fashion as delegated legislation.
This is why The Tide thinks that the Honourable House should not be rigid about personal appearance of the president before it. Instead that lower chamber should raise the required questions the president needs to provide answers to. The important issues is for answers to be provided by the executive arm, with the approval of the president.
More importantly, the invitation is likely to set a dangerous precedence that would see successive House summon the president, at will, over even the most trivial issues. Such situation should be discouraged. This is because, all members of the executive arm, especially Ministers, were screened and endorsed by the National Assembly and ought to be identified and questioned on any issues affecting their various briefs.
The Tide believes that every answer sought could be provided without necessarily subjecting the presidency to such drilling. This is why the House must relax the rigidity on the personal appearance of Mr President before it. No other president of Nigeria has been so subjected.
Besides, the presidency is not an individual but symbolises and should symbolise the political authority of Nigeria and needs to be treated as such. Insisting that Mr President appears before the lower chamber of the National Assembly in person, is indeed unflattering.
While we appreciate the importance of the questions likely to be raised, we nontheless think that the appearance of Mr President, in person, should be at the Commander-in-Chief’s discretion because any where in all democracies a president’s proxy is indeed the president. And such views, the president’s views.
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