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Dogara canvasses return of Option A4

By Adamu Abuh, Abuja
28 April 2017   |   3:16 am
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr. Yakubu Dogara yesterday canvassed the adoption of direct voting method to enable all card-carrying members of parties to choose candidates that will represent their respective parties in elections.

Speaker, House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara PHOTO: TWITTER/DOGARA

•Says it is most transparent method for party primaries
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr. Yakubu Dogara yesterday canvassed the adoption of direct voting method to enable all card-carrying members of parties to choose candidates that will represent their respective parties in elections.

Speaking while responding to a request from a delegation from the Conference of Female Parliamentarians of State Houses of Assembly, led by its chairperson, Hon Elizabeth Ativie, at the National Assembly, he said there was the need to make provision for Option A4 in the Electoral Act.

He argued that direct primaries is more effective in choosing the true candidate of the people because it takes away the option of manipulation of a few delegates by interested parties who have more financial or political influence.

He said, “it is there in most of the Constitution of our political parties where primaries are supposed to be by direct or indirect means. But in most cases, most political parties, if not all, have always opted for the indirect primaries. To be more candid, direct primaries can help even in general elections because once a candidate emerges under that condition, you will know that the people generally accept him or her.

“When it comes to the delegate, it has always been very easy for political actors to manipulate the process. In some cases, someone will house the entire delegates. If he happens to have a lot of money, he will house them in hotels, prevents all other candidates from having access to them and is under that process that the candidate emerges.”

The Speaker maintained that in most cases, the people who have the capacity, “either the political will, the financial muscle to do this, dictate who are the actual representatives from the people.”

“Unfortunately too, our laws do not help matters since we do not have independent candidacy. The only requirement is that you must have a political party platform before you are elected into any office. It therefore means that something has to be done in order to free the process. In order to ensure that this process is truly transparent and democratic and the only way is to let all card carrying members of a political party participate in the election of their candidate. So to this suggestion, you already have a convert in me.”

Assuring them that the House will pass the Gender Equality Bill, he urged the state legislators to engage with their federal counterparts to ensure that a consensus is reached on the issues raised.

“We are aware of the gender equality Bill. It is before the National Assembly and it is before the relevant committees of the House. I believe that this House that has the responsibility of representing men and women will do justice to the Bill. Something will come out of the Bill, it may not be 100 percent in line with our expectations but it is going to be a compromise bill that will have the effect of balancing, not overpowering one gender against the other,” he added.

Dogara also informed them that other areas of concerns, including indigeneship for married women and citizenship for spouses of Nigerian women, would be addressed in the Constitution Amendment exercise whose report would soon be presented to the House.

Earlier, leader of the delegation, who is also the deputy speaker of Edo State House of Assembly urged the Speaker to support women in politics by advocating for amendment of the Amendment Act to provide for use of Option A4 in party primaries, quota system in political parties and appointments for women (35 percent affirmative action), provide legislation for automatic citizenship for spouses of Nigerian woman and indigene status for women married to men from other states in Nigeria.

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