From Tuesday June 11, 2019, when the Ninth Senate was inaugurated, to
December 20, 2019, when it embarked on Christmas and New Year recess,
the apex legislative chamber was able to sponsor a total of 189 bills.
Investigations
carried out by New Telegraph revealed that 70 senators, out of the 109
senators, sponsored these bills while 39 of the lawmakers could better
be described as bench warmers within the six months of legislative
engagements in the Senate, as they did not sponsor any bill.
Further
statistical breakdown also shows that three out of the 189 legislative
proposals were executive bills while 186 were private member bills.
It
is also pertinent to note that the three executive bills had been
considered and passed for third reading in the Senate. They have been
signed into law by President Muhamnadu Buhari.
The three bills
include the N10.594 trillion 2020 Appropriation Bill, the 2019 Finance
Bill and the N278.355 billion 2020 Appropriation bill for the Federal
Capital Territory (FCT, Abuja).
Similarly, apart from the three
executive bills already considered and passed within the period under
review, four out of the 186 private member bills were also passed for
third reading.
One of the four bills, the Deep Off-shore and
Inland Basin Production Sharing Contracts Act CAP D3 LFN 2004
(Amendment) Bill 2019, has been assented to by President Buhari.
Interestingly,
Senators like late Benjamin Uwajumogu (APC, Imo North), Biodun Olujimi
(PDP, Ekiti South) and Smart Adeyemi (APC Kogi West), who joined the 9th
Senate late due to electoral litigation, were among those who sponsored
the 189 bills in the last six months.
Also, it is worthy of
note, that most of the 39 senators who have not sponsor any bill yet,
started with the Ninth Senate during its inauguration on June 11, 2019.
Some
of the senators who have not made any impact in sponsorship of bills
include: Lola Ashiru (APC, Kwara South), Ishaku Elisha Cliff (PDP,
Adamawa North), Stephen Ekpenyong (PDP, Akwa Ibom North West), Adamu
Muhammad Bulkachuwa (APC Bauchi, North), Diri Douye (PDP, Bayelsa
Central) and Onor Sandy Ojang (PDP, Cross River Central).
Others
are Senators Alkali Saidu (APC, Gombe North), Amos Bulus Kilawangs (APC,
Gombe South), Hadeija Hassan Ibrahim (APC, Jigawa North East),
Abdul-Kwari Suleiman (APC, Kaduna North), Abdullah Barkiya Kabir (APC,
Katsina Central), Nicholas Tofowomo (PDP, Ondo South) and Lawal Hassan
Anka (PDP, Zamfara West).
Also in this category are Senators
Yaroe Binos Dauda (PDP, Adamawa South), Peter Nwaoboshi (PDP, Delta
North ), Oseni Yakubu (APC, Kogi Central), Lawrence Ewhrudjakpo (PDP,
Bayelsa West) and Degi Eremienyo (APC, Bayelsa East), who is now the
Deputy Governor-elect for the state, among others.Furthermore,
available records show that a total of 40 out of the 186 private member
bills sponsored in the Senate between October and December last year
have scaled second reading.
Some of the bills include the
controversial anti-social media bill titled: “Protection from Internet
Falsehood and Manipulation Bill 2019 sponsored by Senator Uba Sani (APC,
Kaduna Central), the bill seeking for establishment of the National
Assembly Budget and Research Office sponsored by Senator Rose Oko (PDP,
Cross River North) and the bill seeking for establishment of National
Rice Development Council of Nigeria sponsored by Senator Bima Mohammed
Enagi (APC, Niger South).
Others are the bills seeking for an Act
to prevent, prohibit and redress Sexual Harassment of Students in
Tertiary Educational Institutions sponsored by the Deputy President of
the Senate, Ovie Omo-Agege (APC, Delta Central); Freedom from Hunger
Bill sponsored by Senator Theodore Orji (PDP, Abia Central); National
Health Insurance Commission Bill 2019 sponsored by Senator Ibrahim
Yahaya Oloriegbe (APC, Kwara Central) and the bill seeking for an Act to
provide for constituency projects in the annual budget of the
federation sponsored by Senator Stella Oduah (PDP Anambra North).
Other
bills that have scaled second reading in the Senate within the period
under review are some of those seeking for alteration of provisions of
the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria 1999 (as amended).
They
include the one sponsored by Senator Gabriel Suswam (PDP, Benue North
East), which seeks for a definite and certain day for convening the
first session and inauguration of elected members of National Assembly
and State House of Assembly after their dissolution by the President and
Governor, pursuant to sections 64(3) and 105(3) of the 1999
Constitution as amended.
Most of the 186 bills are still at the
first reading stage, being legislative proposals listed on the Senate’s
Order Papers between 19th November and 20th December, 2019.
However,
the Hate Speech Bill sponsored by Senator Aliyu Sabi Abdullahi (APC,
Niger North), which passed through first reading on Tuesday, November
12, 2019, was never listed for second reading before adjournment for
Christmas and the New year.
The delay in listing this proposal
for second reading may not be unconnected with the controversies it
generated in public domain, after it was introduced in the apex
legislative chamber for consideration.
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