Democracy Day: Opposition bashes Senate for rejecting motion to discuss Buhari’s speech
The Senate on Thursday rejected a motion
seeking its nod to debate the speech delivered by President Muhammadu
Buhari on the Democracy Day.
But the opposition parties led by the
Peoples Democratic Party and the Campaign for Democracy have faulted the
All Progressives Congress-dominated Senate‘s action. They said it was a
bad omen for democracy, adding that the senators should show courage so
as not to encourage dictatorship.
The majority of the senators at plenary
overwhelmingly voted against the motion when the President of the
Senate, Ahmad Lawan, who presided over the session, subjected it to
voice vote.
The motion was moved by Senator Istifanus Gyang (Plateau-PDP), who came under Order 52 of the Senate standing order.
Gyang had sought the leave of her colleagues to present the motion which he described as a matter of public importance.
He said, “The matter of urgent national
importance that I am bringing before this Senate has to do with the
Democracy Day speech of President Muhammadu Buhari on the 12th of June,
2019. This speech is already in the public domain. I am asking that in
view of the interest it has generated, we should debate it.”
Lawan had to cut short the speech of the
lawmaker when he asked him to seek the consent of other senators to
entertain the motion.
Most of the members of the All Progressives Congress-dominated voted against the motion and it was consequently shut down.
Buhari’s speech delivered at the Eagle
Square, Abuja, on Wednesday announced the renaming of the National
Stadium Abuja after the acclaimed winner of the June 12, 1993
presidential election, the late MKO Abiola.
The President also said with good
governance the Federal Government could take 100 million Nigerians from
poverty to prosperity in the next 10 years.
Culled from The Punch
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