Tag: Nigeria Senate

  • Senate Reopens Electoral Act Talks Amid National Outcry Over Data Transmission

    Senate Reopens Electoral Act Talks Amid National Outcry Over Data Transmission

    In an update published by The Punch, the Nigerian Senate is set to convene an emergency plenary session today, February 10, 2026, to address the heated controversy surrounding the 2026 Electoral Act Amendment Bill. The legislative move follows a week of intense public backlash after lawmakers removed the requirement for “real-time” electronic transmission of election results, a decision that critics argue could undermine the transparency of the 2027 general elections.

    The session, directed by Senate President Godswill Akpabio, aims to harmonize the Upper Chamber’s position with that of the House of Representatives. Tension has mounted as civil society organizations and opposition leaders, including Peter Obi, led “Occupy National Assembly” protests in Abuja to demand a reversal of the clause. Lawmakers are expected to deliberate on whether to reinstate the “real-time” terminology to restore public confidence in the electoral process.

    Beyond the electoral dispute, the Senate is also facing internal shifts following the recent loss of two members and the appointment of another to a diplomatic role. This emergency sitting is viewed as a critical moment for the 10th Assembly to prove its commitment to legislative integrity and respond to the demands of a restive citizenry.

    Validating reports from Channels Television and Daily Post confirm the legislative urgency. Channels Television noted that “security operatives have been placed on high alert around the National Assembly complex as protesters gather,” while Daily Post reported that the Senate Spokesman stated the chamber is “not averse to public criticism and will resolve the issue in the interest of the nation.”

    Echotitbits take: The Senate’s decision to backtrack and hold an emergency session suggests that the pressure from “Occupy National Assembly” is working. If the “real-time” transmission clause is not reinstated, expect a further breakdown in trust between the youth-led electorate and the ruling class ahead of 2027.

    Source: TribuneOnline – https://tribuneonlineng.com/updated-electoral-act-senate-summons-emergency-plenary/, February 10, 2026

    Photo credit: TribuneOnline

  • Nigerian Senate Demands Briefing on U.S. Airstrikes in Sokoto Territory

    Nigerian Senate Demands Briefing on U.S. Airstrikes in Sokoto Territory

    Reporting by The Nation indicates that the Nigerian Senate has resolved to conduct a high-level, closed-door security briefing regarding the United States military airstrikes carried out in Sokoto State. Senator Abdul Ningi, representing Bauchi Central, raised a point of order questioning the federal executive’s failure to consult the National Assembly before allowing foreign military intervention on sovereign soil. Senate leadership, headed by Godswill Akpabio, confirmed that an executive session has been scheduled to address these concerns and examine the legal framework surrounding foreign combat operations within Nigeria’s borders.

    The debate in the red chamber centers on the perceived violation of Nigeria’s territorial integrity and the exclusion of the legislative arm from sensitive security decisions. While the executive branch maintains that the strikes targeted specific terrorist hideouts to bolster regional stability, lawmakers are demanding transparency regarding the rules of engagement and decision-making protocols.

    The development was corroborated by Vanguard, which reported that the Senate summoned the nation’s security chiefs to explain the circumstances surrounding the U.S. air operations. Premium Times also followed the legislative tension, quoting Senator Ningi’s position that the National Assembly must not be sidelined in sovereignty-related decisions.

    Echotitbits take: This is a rare display of legislative pushback against executive security arrangements. While U.S. support can be tactically beneficial against insurgents, the Senate’s demand for a briefing signals a shift toward stricter oversight that could complicate future joint operations unless formal protocols are clarified.

    Source: The Punch – https://punchng.com/senate-moves-us-air-strikes-debate-behind-closed-doors/ 2026-01-29

    Photo Credit: The Punch

  • Nigerian Lawmakers Move to Recover Trillions in Withheld Local Government Funds

    Nigerian Lawmakers Move to Recover Trillions in Withheld Local Government Funds

    Reporting by The Authority indicates that Senator Sunday Steve Karimi, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Services, has announced plans for new legislation to assist President Bola Tinubu in recovering trillions of Naira in local government allocations. These funds, allegedly diverted or withheld by various state governors over several years, are at the center of a renewed push for grassroots fiscal autonomy. The move is designed to ensure that the 774 local government areas receive their constitutional dues directly, bypassing state interference.

    The legislative push follows a landmark Supreme Court ruling from 2024 that declared the control of local government resources by governors as unconstitutional. Despite this legal victory, several states have reportedly continued to disregard the apex court’s directive, prompting the National Assembly to consider stricter enforcement mechanisms. The recovered trillions are expected to be funneled into primary healthcare, local infrastructure, and basic education projects at the community level.

    Validating reports from Vanguard and The Punch confirm that the Senate is prioritizing this fiscal cleanup. Vanguard noted that ‘this legislative backing is the final nail in the coffin for the controversial joint-account system,’ while The Punch quoted a constitutional lawyer who argued, ‘Without criminal consequences for governors who divert these funds, the Supreme Court ruling remains a paper tiger.’

    Echotitbits take: This is a high-stakes power struggle between the federal center and the state executives. Recovering ‘trillions’ is an ambitious claim that will likely face fierce legal and political resistance from the Governors’ Forum. If successful, it could fundamentally shift the balance of power in Nigeria, making local government chairmen more powerful—and more accountable—than ever before.
    Source: Thisdaylive – https://www.thisdaylive.com/2026/01/04/karimi-national-assembly-will-back-tinubu-on-recovery-of-trillions-of-naira-stolen-lg-funds/ January 5, 2026

    Photo Credit: Thisdaylive

  • Senate advances ₦58.47tr 2026 budget, tees up debate for the new year

    Senate advances ₦58.47tr 2026 budget, tees up debate for the new year

    Photo Credit: The Nation
    2025-12-24 07:00:00

    According to The Nation, the Senate has advanced the proposed 2026 federal budget after it scaled second reading, keeping the appropriation process on track ahead of more detailed committee work.

    The move signals early legislative buy-in for the headline spending plan, even as lawmakers prepare to drill into the assumptions—revenue projections, borrowing needs, and the spending mix that will shape implementation.

    With the second reading done, the next stage shifts to deeper scrutiny, where sector-by-sector allocations and policy trade-offs become the real battleground.

    TheCable also reported the development, noting that the Senate “passed the N58.472 trillion 2026 appropriation bill for second reading.” ARISE News similarly described the session as lawmakers “passed the N58.47 trillion 2026 appropriation bill for second reading.”

    Echotitbits take: The key watchpoint is not the second reading itself, but the credibility of the financing plan. Nigerians should track what gets trimmed, what gets protected, and whether lawmakers demand stronger performance metrics for MDAs—especially on power, security, and inflation-sensitive social spending.

    Source: The Nation — December 23, 2025 (https://thenationonlineng.net/n58-47tr-2026-budget-scales-second-reading-in-senate/)
    The Nation 2025-12-23

  • Akpabio dares Natasha over sexual harassment suit

    Akpabio dares Natasha over sexual harassment suit

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio has challenged Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan to present evidence of her sexual harassment allegations in court. Punch reports that Akpabio’s media office argues the defamation suit was filed about three months earlier, countering claims that it was newly initiated. The statement characterises the allegations as unproven and accuses the Kogi Central senator of misleading the public by framing the legal action as a sudden response. The dispute adds another layer to the intensifying political and reputational battle playing out between both figures. Source: Punch, December 7, 2025.

  • EDITORIAL : Budget integrity is NOT budget padding.

    EDITORIAL : Budget integrity is NOT budget padding.

    Nigerian National Assembly

    A recent statement by Senator Solomon Adeola, Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations and Senator representing Ogun West Senatorial District, published under the title “The Role of Legislature in Shaping a Holistic Budget for Nigeria,” has reignited public debate over the controversial practice of legislative budget insertions—commonly referred to as “budget padding.”

    In his article, the Senator defends the legislature’s role in adjusting the federal budget, dismissing terms like “padding,” “insertions,” and “constituency projects” as misrepresentations of legitimate legislative contributions to the budgetary process.

    At Echotitbits.com, we fully acknowledge the constitutional role of the National Assembly in reviewing and approving the national budget. However, we must respectfully challenge the narrative that legislative insertions are harmless or beneficial acts of “democracy in action.” On the contrary, such adjustments—when carried out outside the framework of national planning—continue to undermine Nigeria’s development agenda, weaken fiscal discipline, and compromise the integrity of public finance.

    The Purpose of the Envelope

    Nigeria operates a Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF), an internationally recognized tool designed to align national spending with realistic revenue projections, development priorities, and sustainable debt levels.

    Within this framework, each sector—education, health, roads, power—is assigned a budget “envelope” based on available funds and national strategic plans. These envelopes are not arbitrary figures. They are carefully calculated to ensure that the nation’s most pressing needs are funded first and that public spending remains sustainable.

    When the legislature inserts hundreds of small, fragmented projects into the budget without reference to the MTEF, these envelopes are breached. Ministries are then forced to spread their limited resources across too many projects—many of which are duplicative, unviable, or politically motivated.

    This is not merely a budgeting problem. It is a national development crisis.

    A Real-World Example

    Consider a real scenario:

    • Let’s assume under the MTEF, ₦2 trillion is allocated to the Federal Ministry of Works and Housing.

    • National Planning identifies critical projects, including:

    • The Lagos–Ibadan Expressway

    • The Abuja–Kaduna–Zaria–Kano Road

    • However, during the budget process, the National Assembly inserts hundreds of new road projects, each valued between ₦50 million and ₦200 million, scattered across various constituencies nationwide.

    The result?

    • Funding for the major highways—projects vital for national connectivity and economic growth—is slashed.

    • Many of the smaller inserted roads are abandoned or remain incomplete due to inadequate funding and planning.

    • The national transport strategy suffers, and Nigeria’s development goals are delayed.

    This is a clear example of how legislative insertions can derail national priorities, waste resources, and leave citizens stranded with half-completed projects.

    Insertions vs. National Priorities

    Legislative insertions are often justified under the banner of promoting equity or delivering development to neglected areas. While this may sound noble in theory, it frequently leads to waste and inefficiency in practice. Projects inserted late into the budget process are rarely subjected to rigorous planning. They often lack feasibility studies, are poorly costed, and fail to align with sectoral strategies.

    We have witnessed the consequences firsthand: unfinished health centres, abandoned rural roads, ghost ICT hubs, and duplicated training workshops. Meanwhile, large-scale national infrastructure—projects with the potential to drive economic growth, create jobs, and reduce poverty—remains underfunded or delayed.

    This is not equity. It is inefficiency.

    Who Really Benefits?

    The Senator is correct in stating that lawmakers do not execute projects directly; instead, implementation falls to Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs). However, this misses the critical issue. The core concern is how these projects enter the budget in the first place—and whose interests they ultimately serve.

    Many inserted projects are awarded to politically connected contractors with little or no accountability to the communities they are meant to benefit. The result is an erosion of public trust in both the budget process and governance as a whole.

    Strengthening the Budget Process

    A credible budget process demands transparency, fiscal discipline, and a clear connection to national priorities. To achieve this:

    1. All budget insertions must be made public, including details of their origin and justification.

    2. Constituency needs should be integrated into national planning frameworks through structured dialogue—not through last-minute lobbying.

    3. Sectoral envelopes must be respected, not breached.

    4. The National Assembly should focus on strong oversight, ensuring that public funds deliver value for money rather than becoming vehicles for political patronage.

    This is how democracy should function—not through distortions of the budget, but through accountability and measurable results.

    Conclusion

    The term “budget padding” is not a media invention. It reflects a budgeting culture that too often prioritizes political interests over Nigeria’s broader development goals. Rebranding insertions as “legislative adjustments” does not erase the very real consequences they have had on project execution, fiscal stability, and the welfare of ordinary Nigerians.

    At Echotitbits.com, we believe that budget integrity is the cornerstone of responsible governance. If democracy is truly about the people, then our budget must reflect their genuine needs—not merely the influence of political actors.

     Echotitbits.com Editorial Board

     July 7, 2025

  • Nigeria National Assembly Passes N13.5trn 2021 Budget, N500bn Higher than Initial Proposal

    The Senate on Monday passed the 2021 Appropriation Bill of N13.5 trillion.

    This followed the adoption of the report of Senate Committee on Appropriations at plenary.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), reports that President Muhammadu Buhari had on Oct. 8, presented the 2021 budget of N13.08 trillion to the joint session of the National Assembly for approval.

    Similarly, the House of Representatives also passed the 2021 budget of N13.5 trillion for the Year 2021 has been passed by Nigeria’s National Assembly on Monday ahead of the Christmas and New Year break.

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    The passing of the budget, which followed consideration of a report by the committee on appropriation is N500bn higher than the N13.08 Trillion earlier presented before the joint session of the National Assembly by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    Details of the budget include about N6 Trillion allocated for recurrent expenditure, N4.2 trillion for Capital expenditure and N3.32 Trillion for Debt servicing.

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    Presenting the report on the floor of the house, Chairman of the Committee on appropriation, Alhaji Aliyu Betera, while presenting the committee’s report on the floor of the House confirmed that sectors with highest allocation in the 2021 Appropriation Bill includes Defence with about N840bn (eight hundred and forty Billion naira); education with over N545bn (five hundred and forty five Billion naira), Police Affairs about N438bn (four hundred and thirty eight Billion naira) while health sector received over N380 (three hundred and eighty Billion naira.)

    The nation’s 2021 budget estimate is based on a $40 per barrel assumption, with crude oil production at 1.86million barrel per day.