- The Forum of Presidential Candidates has supported President Buhari’s decision on the new electoral amendment bill
- The forum which comprises of 40 presidential candidates said the planned amendment was too close to the 2019 elections
- It said that signing the bill now will create difficulty for INEC
The Forum of Presidential Candidates on Sunday, December 9, declared their support for President Muhammadu Buhari’s decision to decline assent to the Electoral (Amendment) Bill 2018.
According to a statement made available to The Punch, the forum took the decision at a meeting held to review the matter.
Legit.ng gathers that the 40 presidential candidates under the forum said they supported Buhari’s position that the planned amendment to the bill came too close to the general elections.
The statement was jointly signed by the presidential candidate of the Advanced Peoples Democratic Alliance, Alhaji Shitu Kabir; and presidential candidate of the Movement for the Restoration of Democracy, Danjuma Muhammad.
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The statement read: “The time left between now and when the 2019 elections will start is too short for INEC to recruit relevant staff and give them adequate training.
“We also think that the electoral body may not be in a position to respond fast enough in cases where the electronic devices malfunction.
“The constraints and impediments of time and resources in difficult terrains will deliberately deny many local communities the opportunity to vote.”
In a related development, the senatorial candidate of the All Progressives Congress (APC) in Enugu West, Chief Juliet Ibekalu-Nwagwu, in a separate statement said President Buhari’s decision on the electoral amendment bill was meant to save Nigeria from political implosion.
“The rejection of assent to the 2018 Electoral Act Amendment Bill by President Buhari is a timely decision that displays leadership wisdom to save the country from political implosion.
“The decision also saved INEC from a booby trap that would have put the commission in a very tight situation,” Ibekalu-Nwagwu said.
She added that amending rules that would be applied to the conduct of elections that are barely two months away is a deliberate attempt to raise the stake high for INEC to meet up with.
She disagreed with those who hold the belief that Buhari refused to sign the bill because the amendment would check APC’s rigging plans, including the use of underage.
“I don’t see Mr President’s decision as a calculated attempt to hold the nation to ransom, inject crisis into the electoral process and ultimately scuttle the conduct of the 2019 general elections as claimed by the opposition.
“Such claim is unnecessary. It is rather a calculated attempt to portray Mr President in a bad light, especially before the international community.
Adeola, an APC member, said this in a statement on Sunday, December 9, by his media aide, Kayode Odunaro.want to discredit Mr President out of office at all cost,” she added.
Meanwhile, the chairman of Senate Committee on Local Content, Senator Solomon Adeola, has condemned those urging the National Assembly to override Buhari’s veto on the electoral bill 2018.
He said those making such calls “do not have the national interest of Nigeria and the safety and sanctity of the 2019 elections at heart.”
Adeola, an APC member, said this in a statement on Sunday, December 9, by his media aide, Kayode Odunaro.
He said: “If the previous Electoral Act being amended can produce the democratic landmark of an opposition party winning a free and fair election from a ruling party in power for 16 years in 2015 under the then ruling party, then it can be relied on even to deliver free and fair elections.
“As a senator and a Nigerian, I cannot be part of any move to override the president veto on the electoral bill. The president clearly stated his reasons for the veto and I think they are cogent enough to be accepted by all in the national interest.”
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Meanwhile, Legit.ng previously reported that President Buhari, on Friday, December 7, for the fourth time, rejected assent to the electoral amendment bill which was passed to him to sign into law by both the Senate and the House of Representatives.
The president who has written to the National Assembly said he could not sign the bill into law at this time that the country was preparing for the 2019 general elections.
He said that he could only assent to it after next year’s elections, adding that if done now, it would end up causing uncertainty and crisis in the country.
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Source: Legit.ng