Gbajabiamila
Speaker of the House of Representatives Rt. Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila
has said that Nigerians need more enlightenment on the core functions
of members of the National Assembly.
The
Speaker said a situation where majority of Nigerians assess
lawmakers based on criteria separate from their core constitutional
functions was not good for the country's democracy.
Speaking
when he received the leadership of the Centre for Legislative
Engagement headed by Prof Attahiru Jega, the Speaker said apart from
the constitutional roles of lawmaking, representation and oversight
that lawmakers have, Nigerians expect other things from them.
Against
the backdrop of the findings of a research that the centre carried
out about the performance of the 8th National Assembly, Gbajabiamila
said it was imperative to always asses the lawmakers based on their
constitutional responsibilities.
"Generally,
there's a lot to be done to improve the perception of the
legislature. What you've done will go a long way in helping us. But
if we don't get the fundamentals right, there's a problem.
"Do
Nigerians understand the work of the legislature? The work of the
legislature isn't visible. We're meant to make laws, but the average
man on the street doesn't see that.
"So,
I believe there's need for a lot of enlightenment. You should help us
to do that too so that Nigerians will understand the real functions
of the legislature.
"Some
people try to compare legislators with the Executive, but the
constitutional roles are completely different. Ours is to make laws.
You don't have to impose the functions of one on the other," the
Speaker said.
Earlier,
Jega told the Speaker that the research conducted by the centre took
samples from 12 states and that it was the first of its kind in the
country, saying it would provide a framework for further works on the
activities of the Nigerian legislature.
He
said the research found out that there was a significant increase
in the number of bills passed by the 8th Assembly, compared to
previous assemblies, but that the overall efficiency performance was
less than 30 per cent.
Thus,
Jega said, the centre recommended that there should be
pre-legislative scrutiny before any bill is presented and that the
National Assembly should create a legislative standard committee to
oversee the quality of bills being presented.
Another
recommendation, he said, was the use of electronic voting on bills
and critical motions, which he noted that the Speaker has already
commenced the process of ensuring that.
The
study also recommended that there should be an improvement in the
quality of legislative oversight of committees by establishing a
minimum benchmark and standard.
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