Since the issue of how Senate Standing Orders can be changed has been the subject of both on-going civil and criminal litigations which are now threatening the freedom of the presiding officers and the independence of the institution itself, it is pertinent that one addresses the question: How does the Senate generate its rules and how does it amend them?
Starting from June 1999, when the Fourth Senate was inaugurated, the convention has been established that the bureaucracy, that is the Clerk of the Senate and his staff prepare the Standing Order with which the Senate will be inaugurated. The Rules contained in the Standing Order may or may not be adapted from the one used by the previous Senate, and also may or may not be with changes. That is why the Senate rule book provides for the process of amending the rules so that after the Senate has been properly convened and inaugurated, members can use the provision to put the rules in the shape that represents their interests. The current Standing Order in use has the provision for amendment in Order 110 (1-5).
It should also be noted that the Standing Order used by a previous Senate is deemed dead along with the Senate that adopted and used it. That is why all the Standing Orders, except the one first used to inaugurate the Fourth Senate, have the label ‘as amended’. As such, on the day of inauguration of a new Senate, the first thing that is done is for the Clerk of the National Assembly to read the Proclamation Order by the President of the Republic. The reading of the President’s Proclamation Order breathes into an hitherto dead Senate and brings it alive.
Then the Clerk will take a roll call of the Senators present and confirm the writs of election, as well as the declaration of assets and liabilities of the Senators-elect in alphabetical order. After this, the Clerk will call for the nomination of candidates for the office of Senate President. Each nomination made by a Senator-elect must be seconded by another Senator-elect. The Senator-elect so nominated must indicate his acceptance of the nomination. After the close of nominations, it is either the sole candidate is led to the elevated chair of the Senate President by his nominators to be sworn-in, as it happened in the case of Dr. Abubakar Bukola Saraki, or where there are two candidates, the Senators-elect go on to vote for the candidates so nominated.
In Saraki’s case, he was the sole nominee. So, whatever provision guiding the Senate President’s election was not activated on June 9, 2015. The oath of Allegiance and Oath of Membership are then administered on the Senate President-elect by the clerk of the National Assembly. Having been sworn in, the new helmsman acknowledges the Senate for the honour conferred on him. He then goes ahead to sit in the President’s chair. The mace which hitherto had been laid on the lower bracket is then laid on the upper bracket of the Table.
The same procedure is applied in the election of the Deputy Senate President. We have to note that up to this point, the electors are Senators-elect. It is the newly elected Senate President who will then administer oaths of Membership and Allegiance on the Senators-elect after which they become Senators.
The implication of the above procedure is that no Senator can before or at the first sitting influence the procedure or the rules to be used. The Senators as at that time are inchoate. They are still Senators-elect with no role, influence or power to effect changes or their will on the Senate. That remains the prerogative of the Clerk of the National Assembly or the Clerk of the Senate. The clerk is also free to use his discretion, since it is known that after the Senators-elect are sworn in on the inaugural day, any Senator who does not like any provision in the Standing Order can initiate or activate the process for amending the said rule. Order 110 mentioned above empowers “any Senator desiring to amend any part of the rules”. It does not talk of a Senator-elect.
Again, the Senate can adopt the provisional Standing Order presented to it on the first day by the bureaucracy and therefore it remains the Standing Order of the institution. Now, how does the above stated explanation apply to the case of forgery instituted against Saraki, his deputy, Dr. Ike Ekweremadu, Clerk of the National Assembly, Alhaji Salisu Maikasuwa and his deputy, Mr. Ben Efeturi?
First, the Standing Order used by the Seventh Senate is deemed dead with that Senate. Also, the copies of the Standing Order distributed to Senators-elect on June 9, 2015 during their inauguration was prepared, and rightly so, by the National Assembly bureaucracy. Since members of the Eight Senate had the opportunity to amend the provisions of the rule book titled ‘Senate Standing Orders 2015 As Amended’ after they have been inaugurated and nobody has initiated the procedure for amendment, then it is deemed that they have adopted, accepted and endorsed what was initially the creation of the bureaucracy. The issue of forgery can therefore not arise as a man cannot forge his own signature.
Also, forgery can only exist where there is an original and a fake. The present Standing Orders of the Senate has no fake version. Only one version exists. Some of the aggrieved Senators who are not happy with the emergence of Saraki and Ekweremadu as Senate President and Deputy Senate President respectively once raised their dislike for certain provisions of the Standing Order now in use on the floor and since the motion was unpopular, it was overruled by the majority. At that point, the Senate only once again confirmed that it has adopted the Standing Order which has now been operational for the past 13 months.
Also, with the procedure stated above, it is clear that no Senator-elect can influence the content of the standing order. They actually have no say on it. Even, if a Senator-elect could have a say, definitely Saraki who was not a member of the leadership of the Seventh Senate did not have the influence or power and reach to direct what should happen. It should also be noted that the said Order 3 (3)(e) (ii) which is said to have provided for secret balloting, instead of the open show of hand as provided in the Standing Order 2011, was not used in Saraki’s election to the office of Senate President. He emerged unopposed under Order (3) (c) which is consistent in all the previous rules.
That is why it is surprising that with the police report, statements by those interrogated and other documents not mentioning Saraki’s name or involvement, he is still dragged into the present case by those who want to get him out of office by all means. Those same political opponents believe they can use the opportunity of the trial to throw out the PDP man in an APC controlled Senate – Ekweremadu. Like Saraki, the incumbent Deputy Senate President was a Senator-elect on June 9, 2015 before he was elected. He could not have been in a position to insist that certain rules be adopted. In any case, whatever rule was adopted on June 9, 2015 could not have changed the result as PDP members formed the majority on the floor of the Senate that day. The APC that has the majority of the members in the Senate has a divided house and a good number of its members also chose to embark on a voyage of discovery to the International Conference Centre (ICC) at a time they were supposed to be inside the chambers for their inauguration and election of the Senate’s Presiding Officers.
The decision to now put Saraki and others on trial was a simple game by the Attorney General of the Federation, Mr. Abubakar Malami, who was a lawyer to the aggrieved Senators before he was appointed to his present office to help his clients achieve what they could not do on the floor of the Senate and what may not be possible with their civil suit. That is why the issues of conflict of interest, abuse of office, abuse of judicial process, intimidation of the Senate, violation of the principle of Separation of Powers, checks and balances and the rest are relevant in the on-going suit.
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