Reps Pushing To Make Appeal Court Final Judge In Gov Election Disputes — Lawmaker

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A member of the House of Representatives, Bayo Balogun, on Tuesday, said the green chamber is advancing a bill seeking to amend the 1999 Constitution to make the Court of Appeal the final arbiter on governorship election petitions in Nigeria

Balogun, the Chairman of House Committee on the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), stated this on Channels Television’s Politics Today programme on Tuesday.

“One advantage of that provision is that while the state and National Assembly are in the Tribunal, then the presidential and governorship will be at the Appeal Court.

So, by the time they are moving from the Appeal to the Supreme Court, the one of the state and National Assembly will now be going to the Appeal Court. So we will now have a spread,” he stated.

“What we are trying to do now is to reduce the tribunal period to 90 days and the appeal to 50 days,” he added.

He explained that there wouldn’t be three layers again for anybody after a governorship poll has been conducted.

The bill, if passed, will remove the Supreme Court from the appeal process in governorship disputes.

Under the current system, governorship election disputes can be escalated from the Tribunal to the Court of Appeal and ultimately to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court is the final court for governorship election petitions, while the Court of Appeal is the final court for National and State House of Assembly election cases.

The proposed legislation titled, ‘A Bill for an Act to Alter the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 to Make the Court of Appeal the Final Appeal Court in Governorship, National and State Houses of Assembly Election’ was sponsored by Nnamdi Ezechi, member representing Ndokwa East/Ndokwa West/Ukwuani Constituency.

According to the lawmaker, the law would make INEC to hold elections earlier than February to pave the way for the conclusion of post-election litigations before the end of a governor’s tenure.

He explained that there wouldn’t be three layers again for anybody after a governorship poll has been conducted.

The bill, if passed, will remove the Supreme Court from the appeal process in governorship disputes.

Under the current system, governorship election disputes can be escalated from the Tribunal to the Court of Appeal and ultimately to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court is the final court for governorship election petitions, while the Court of Appeal is the final court for National and State House of Assembly election cases.

The proposed legislation titled, ‘A Bill for an Act to Alter the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, 1999 to Make the Court of Appeal the Final Appeal Court in Governorship, National and State Houses of Assembly Election’ was sponsored by Nnamdi Ezechi, member representing Ndokwa East/Ndokwa West/Ukwuani Constituency.

 

 

 

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