Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari, while sending it back, has asked the National Assembly to remove the clause that has to do with direct primaries from the Electoral Act Amendment Bill.
Reports have it on Monday that the President, who stated this in his letter to the Senate, asked the National Assembly to remove the controversial clause on direct primaries from the bill and return the proposed law to him for assent.
Garba Shehu, Special Adviser to President Buhari on Media and Publicity, confirmed it to newsmen that Buhari had sent the letter to the National Assembly.
But a source who was privy to the content of the letter said the President refused assent because political parties had their various constitutions that stipulated different mode of primaries that should be adopted.
The President reportedly argued that it would be unconstitutional to force parties to adopt direct primaries and that small parties will be marginalised because that mode will be too expensive.
“With these reasons, the President has returned the bill to the National Assembly, asking the lawmakers to look at the clause that has to do with direct primaries by political parties, work on it and return the document for assent because it will compound insecurity in the country,” the source added.
The bill was transmitted to the President on November 19, 2021, after both chambers of the National Assembly passed shortly before a tripartite meeting with the APC leadership and the governors.