Senate Amends Electoral Act, Makes Elected Govt  Officials Party Delegates

The Senate, on Tuesday, hurriedly amended the 2022 Electoral Act, No. 13, to allow the President, Vice President, and other elected government functionaries to participate and vote in conventions, congresses or meetings of political parties.

It also empowered both Chambers of the National Assembly two days to finish work on the bill before assent by President Muhammadu Buhari.

During plenary,President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan,explained that “Our expectation is that the National Assembly – the two chambers – would finish with the processing of the amendment of this bill, between today (in the Senate) and tomorrow (in the House of Representatives), and then the Executive will do the assent.”

He said the  amendment became imperative in view of the deficiency created by the provision of section 84(8) of the extant Act.

He added:“The amended Electoral Act of 2022 that we passed this year, has a deficiency that was never intended and that deficiency will deny all statutory delegates in all political parties from participation in congresses and conventions.

“And, therefore, such a major and unintended clause has to be amended before the party primaries starts in the next eight days. This is an emergency legislation, so to speak.

He also emphasized the import of the amendment, adding that it enables “every statutory delegate to participate in the party primaries right from the beginning that will start on the 18th of May, 2022.

“So, this is an emergency effort to ensure that nobody is denied his or her rightful opportunity as a delegate, especially the statutory delegates, and these are those who are elected.

“These are the President, Vice President, members of the National Assembly, Governors, Members of the State Houses of Assembly, Chairmen of Council and their Councilors, National Working Committee Members of all the political parties and so on.

“This is a fundamental effort to ensure that we address this within the week, so that by next week, the Electoral Act, 2022 (amended version), will be very salutary for us to start our party primaries.”

The amendment if assented to by President Muhammadu Buhari, will extend further, same rights to members of the National Assembly, Governors and their deputies, Members of the State Houses of Assembly, Chairmen of Councils, Councilors and members of National Working Committee of political parties.

Categorizing those affected as ‘statutory delegates,’ the Bill was sponsored by the Deputy Senate President, Ovie Omo-Agege (Delta Central).

It also scaled first, second and third readings at plenary, and was passed by the chamber after consideration by the committee.

In his argument, the sponsor of the bill,Senator Omo-Agege,said that the bill seeks to amend the provision of section 84(8) of the Electoral Act.

He explained that the provisions of the section “does not provide for the participation of what is generally known as ‘statutory delegates’ in the conventions, congresses or meetings of political parties.”

“The extant section only clearly provides for the participation of elected delegates in the conventions, congresses or meetings of political parties held to nominate candidates of political parties. This is an unintended error, and we can only correct it with this amendment now before us”, the Deputy Senate President said.

Senate Moves Against Tariff Hike In Pay-Tv 

The   Senate has constituted a seven-man ad-hoc committee to carry out a comprehensive investigation on the new tariff imposed on Nigerian subscribers by
Pay-TV service provider,DSTV
The committee will also carry out investigation on how other countries are billed by pay-tv service providers.
President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, while announcing the composition of the ad-hoc committee, tasked the panel to ensure an immediate downward review of bouquet prices in tandem with the prevailing reality of economic situation in Nigeria.
The Senate decision was sequel to  a motion titled, “Nigerians dumbfounded, outraged over Pay-Tv Tariff Hikes, demand for Pay-Per-View subscription model”, sponsored by Senator Abba Moro (Benue South).
 Senator Moro noted with concern the uproar within the public over tariff hikes, price increases by Pay-tv service providers on their bouquets;
He stated that the leading pay-tv service provider in Nigeria, (MultiChoice Nigeria) informed all DStv compact subscribers on August, 22 2020, to expect a 13.3% price increase to N7,900 up from N6, 975 commencing from September 1, 2020.
He lamented the hike in subscription fee for DStv compact plus by 9.8 percent from N10,925 to N12,000, and DStv premium from N16, 200 to N18,400 indicating a 13.6% hike.
He said:“MultiChoice Nigeria willfully and perpetually increases the cost of its bundles because there is no regulation whatsoever in the area of fixing rates.”
“Notes further that as usual, without recourse to the economic situation of the country MultiChoice has again raised the cost of its DStv and GOtv bundles stating them as follows, DStv Premium (#21,000), Compact (#14,250), Compact (#9, 000), Confam (#5, 300), Yanga (#2, 950), Padi (#2, 150), Business(#2, 669), Xtraview PVR access fee (2, 900).
“Those of GOtv are as follows; GOtv Max (4,150), GOtv Jolli (#2, 6669), GOtv Jinja (#1, 900), GOtv Lite (#900)”, he said.
He expressed concern that thousands of pay-tv subscribers in Nigeria have bitterly reacted to the development on different social media platforms, ranging from deep shock to pure outrage with many asking the Nigerian government to checkmate the activities of pay-tv service providers in Nigeria especially in the area of fixing prices.
He added that among the bitter complaints of Nigerian subscribers of pay-tv services is the poor network service experienced as a result of bad weather/ epileptic electricity supply, which sometimes makes a whole month subscription wasteful without the subscriber watching anything before the expiration.
Moro said that Nigerians are demanding that, rather than paying fixed rates for packages monthly, pay-tv service providers should introduce a subscription model which allows subscribers pay per-view to enable them match their TV consumption to subscription as it is the case with electricity metering and mobile telephony.
He explained that the pay-per-view that Nigerian subscribers are demanding for, is a flexible model plan of subscription which allows subscribers of pay-tv to pay-per watch, to avoid Paying for services which they do not consume.
Earlier, the Senate while deliberating on the motion kicked against the increase in tariffs by Multi-Choice Nigeria.
It urged the Federal Ministry of Communications and Digital Economy, and the Nigerian Communications Commission to direct all pay-tv providers to introduce a pay-per-view model of subscription as against the month to month prepaid model presently in place.
The chamber also directed all pay-tv service providers in Nigeria to immediately review their bouquet prices downwards in tandem with the prevailing reality of the economic situation in the country.
It also resolved to set up an adhoc committee to embark on full scale investigation on the pricing activities of DStv (MultiChoice Nigeria) in Nigeria to bring it in line with international practice.