The Presidency on Wednesday said
President Goodluck Jonathan was ready to forget his ambition to run for
second term in 2015 if the Senate passed its proposal for a single
non-renewable six-year tenure into law.
Though
Jonathan had made half-hearted denial of his ambition for another term
in office, the body movements of the President and his loyalists had
clearly shown that he was preparing to run in the 2015 general election.
But
the President’s Special Adviser on Political Matters, Dr. Ahmed Gulak,
said the ambition to stage a return would be shelved if Senators decided
in favour of a single term for the President and state governors.
Gulak
who spoke to The PUNCH in Abuja said, “Nigerians will remember that it
was President Jonathan that suggested an idea of a single term tenure
from the beginning. So if the proposal becomes a law, the credit should
go to the President.
“If it becomes a law and is enshrined in our
constitution, the President and everybody will be bound by the provision
of that law. Let us wait and see what happens.
“We are not seeing
the move as a way of stopping President Jonathan from re-contesting in
2015. The law cannot be made because of one individual.
“When it takes effect, everybody will be bound by it.”
Senate
Committee on the Review of the Constitution had recommended
non-renewable single six year tenure for the offices of President,
Vice-President, governors and their deputies.
The Senate panel’s
recommendation disqualifies Jonathan and incumbent governors from
benefitting from the new arrangement if the recommendation becomes law.
In
justifying the move, the Chairman of the Senate Committee on
Information and Media, Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe, was quoted on
Wednesday as saying that the development was the outcome of public
hearings across the country.
If passed into law, Jonathan will not be eligible to contest the 2015 presidential election.
Gulak noted that the President should even be given credit for being the originator of the single-term proposal.
Jonathan
had in 2011 suggested a single-term of seven years for elective offices
to avoid the wrangling often associated with second-term bids.
In
a related development, Speaker of the House of Representatives, Aminu
Tambuwal, said on Wednesday that the ongoing review of the 1999
Constitution would answer questions about the nature of Nigeria’s unity.
Tambuwal spoke at the opening of a retreat for members of the House AdHoc Committee on Constitution Review in Abuja.
The
committee, headed by the Deputy Speaker, Mr. Emeka Ihedioha, organised
the retreat to allow House members appraise the report of the People’s
Public Sessions on the constitution and prepare them for the next stage
of the review process.
The public sessions were held across the
federation on November 10, 2012, where Nigerians voted on a 43-item
template on sections of the constitution they desired amendments.
Tambuwal
acknowledged that Nigeria was facing many challenges, which had forced
the citizens to ask questions on the nature of the country’s union and
assured that the fears expressed by the people would be addressed by the
new constitution envisaged.
He said, “As you well know, our
country today faces many challenges and some of our people have been
asking questions about the very nature of our union.
“We hope
eventually to provide Nigerians with a constitution that will answer
some of these questions and further cement our hard fought unity.”
The
Speaker claimed that reactions from Nigerians since the House publicly
tendered the report of the People’s Public Sessions on April 18
suggested that they had confidence in the National Assembly to do a
thorough representation of their views in the constitution.
However,
he warned the committee members against cutting corners or attempting
to impose their own views on the people in the course of appraising the
report.
“So far, you have all shown remarkable patriotism but I
must again emphasise the need for your work to be free of all personal
bias.
“You must work only on data provided by the nationwide
public hearing and your conclusion should reflect the aggregate opinion
of fellow Nigerians”, the speaker stated.
But the deputy speaker
said, “The results of the Peoples Public Sessions as unveiled by the
House would be subjected to proper legislative action as required by the
Standing Orders of the House and by the Constitution of the Federal
Republic of Nigeria, as amended.
“There are no short-cuts. This
retreat will give members of the committee acting on behalf of the
entire House the opportunity to brainstorm on the language of the
amendments where consensus has been reached.
“It is pertinent to
note that the National Assembly is one. For this process to work, the
House and Senate Constitution Review Committees must work together to
propose the same bills and vote on the same issues.
“The Senate
and the House of Representatives must an reach agreement before any
section of the constitution is amended. Indeed, two-thirds of the 36
State Houses of Assembly must agree (as well).”
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