Ten more PDP Reps to join APC today – Rep
The spokesman of the House of Representatives, Zakari Mohammed has
disclosed that the House is set to witness a major change in its
leadership as it resumed today (Tuesday) from its Christmas and New year
break.
This is as a Federal High Court in Abuja on Monday restrained the
legislators from going ahead with the planned change of the leadership
pending the determination of the substantive suit.
Mohammed, who disclosed after a meeting with some politicians in
Kaiama local government area of Kwara State in his constituency, also
hinted that about an additional 10 members of House from the Peoples
Democratic Party (PDP) were set to defect to the All Progressives
Congress (APC)
Some 36 of them, including Zakari, had recently left PDP for APC,
making the APC to emerge the party with majority members in the House.
The House spokesman said the positions of house majority leader,
Deputy Majority Leader, Chief Whip and Deputy Chief Whip are likely to
be affected in the expected change.
He stated: “As it stands today, as I talk to you now, we have (APC)
172, PDP is 167 and the rest which is 20 to 22 belongs to the other
parties.
“So, for me, I believe that by the special grace of God, when we
resume, we’re going to have other members coming to the APC when the
position of the majority leader, Deputy Majority Leader, Chief Whip and
Deputy Chief Whip would be repositioned to the APC.
“We have about 10 members who are coming into the APC as soon as we resume on Tuesday, January 21,” he said.
Mohammed explained that the APC decided not to contest the
speakership and Deputy speakership of the house since it is now in a
majority because the posts are a constitutional issue which had nothing
to do with population strength.
He said: “The speakership and deputy speakership are constitution
positions; you don’t necessarily have to be in the majority to be
speaker in the house.
In its ruling the court presided over by Justice Ademola Adeniyi held
that, “defendants in this matter, particularly the first to 11th (the
House and its principal officers) are to maintain status quo pending the
determination of the substantive suit in accordance with rules of the
court, as well as standing rules of the House.
“It is trite law that a preliminary objection challenging the
jurisdiction of a court over a suit be taken first in line with rules of
the Federal High Court.
“It is a well established principle of law that a court of law has no
power to make an order when its jurisdiction its challenged.
Justice Adeniyi said, “it is the court opinion that the power to preserve the res that is before it.
Consequently, the court held that the preliminary objection of the
defendants alongside the originating summon of the plaintiff would be
heard on February 3, 2014.
He pointed out that the motion for interlocutory injunction filed by
the plaintiff was struck out, just as the court gave the PDP four days
to file its written address in support of its originating summon.
All the defendants were equally ordered to file their replies within
48 hours, while another 72 hours was given to them to respond on points
of law to the plaintiff’s counter affidavit to the preliminary
objection.
Meanwhile, Senators and House of Representatives members are already
spoiling for a showdown with their leadership, over the controversial
issue of proposed cross-carpeting of some PDP lawmakers to the rival
APC, as both chambers of the National Assembly resumes plenary today for
a new legislative session , after the Christmas and New Year holiday.
Daily Independent findings on Monday from top Senate and House of
Representatives sources, revealed that there is intense anger on the
part of most PDP members of both legislative houses, particularly
Senators, who are apprehensive that their seats will be declared vacant,
should they defect to the APC, as the Senate and PDP leadership have
been threatening to do.
At the upper chamber, defecting PDP Senators has vowed to resist any
attempt by the David Mark leadership to nullify their seats when they
cross-over.
They are equally angry and worried about the rumoured plans by the
Senate leadership to resurrect, for immediate deliberation, a pending
report by its Committee on Ethics, Public Petitions and Privileges,
headed by Senator Ayo Akinyelure, which had earlier investigated and
declared illegal, the defection of Senator Robert Ajayi Boroffice from
the Labour Party (LP) on which platform he came to the Senate, to the
ACN, before it merged to form APC.
The committee, in it’s report submitted in November 2012 to the
Senate, had recommended that Boroffice seat should be declared vacant on
the basis that his action violated Section 68(1)(g) of the 1999
Constitution (as amended) on matters of cross party decampment.
The Senator reportedly had not formally notified the Senate of his
decision to decamp to the defunct ACN, which transmuted to APC.
Not only that, the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC),
had in a letter to Boroffice on September 13, 2012 and signed by the
Commission’s scribe, Abdullahi Kaugama, impugned the Senator’s defection
on the grounds that there was no division in Labour Party, according to
INEC’s record and as stipulated by the nation’s apex law book, to
warrant the cross-over.
DAILY INDEPENDENT
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