Wednesday, June 10, 2015

APC reject Saraki, Dogara's NASS victory

The All Progressive Congress on Tuesday kicked against the emergence of Senator Bukola Saraki and Hon. Yakub Dogara as the Senate President and the Speaker of the House of Assembly respectively.According to the party the inauguration and the process which led to the emergence of Saraki and Dogara represented the highest level of indiscipline.

The party therefore threatened to sanction the two men and their supporters in order   to clearly show its determination “to enforce party discipline and supremacy.
”The statement read in part, “Senator Saraki and   Dogara are not the candidates of the APC and a majority of its National Assembly members-elect for the positions of Senate President and House Speaker.
“The party duly met and conducted a straw poll and clear candidates emerged for the posts of Senate President, the Deputy Senate President and the Speaker of the House of Representatives, supported by a majority of all Senators-elect and members-elect of the House of Representatives.
“All National Assembly members-elect who emerged on the platform of the party are bound by that decision.
“The party is supreme and its interest is superior to that of its individual members.”
The   APC said its leadership was meeting to reestablish discipline   and to mete out the necessary sanctions to all those involved in the “monumental act of indiscipline and betrayal to subject the party to ridicule and create obstacles for the new administration.”
The party also decried what it described as a situation in which some people, based on nothing but “inordinate ambition and lack of discipline and loyalty, will enter into an unholy alliance with the very same people whom the party and indeed the entire country worked hard to replace and sell out the hard won victory of the party.”
Urging all its “loyal senators-elect” to report to the Senate to be sworn in, it vowed to use all constitutional and legal means to resolve the issue.
But President Muhammadu   Buhari later issued a statement in which he said he   stood by his earlier position that he would work with whoever the lawmakers elected as their leaders.
He added in the   statement by his Special Adviser (Media and Publicity), Femi Adesina, that even though he would have loved that “the process of electing the leaders as initiated and concluded by the APC had been followed,” he   “took the view that a constitutional process has somewhat occurred.”
“President Buhari had said in an earlier statement that he did not have any preferred candidate for the Senate and the House of Representatives, and that he was willing to work with whoever the lawmakers elected,” Adesina said.
“That sentiment still stands. Though he would have preferred the new leaders to have emerged through the process established by the party,” he added.
Adesina stressed that “the stability of our constitutional order and overall interest of the common man were uppermost on the President’s mind, as far as the National Assembly elections were concerned.”
The President therefore called on all the elected representatives of the people to focus on the enormous task of bringing enduring positive change to the lives of Nigerians.

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