Tuesday, 31 December 2013

Presidency moves to stop PDP senators’ defection

President of the Senate, David Mark
The  Presidency has mounted pressure on the leadership of the Senate to persuade aggrieved Peoples Democratic Party senators not to carry out their plan to dump the ruling party for the All Progressives Congress, investigation by The PUNCH has revealed.
A  source close to the Senate leadership said that the Senate President, David Mark, had personally held a series of meetings with  some of the aggrieved senators with a view to making them have a rethink.
“Meetings are being held to prevent the PDP senators from going ahead with their planned action. I am sure the peace moves are yielding fruitful results, “ he told one of our correspondents on condition of anonymity on Sunday night.
He however did not say when and where the meetings were held and the number of aggrieved lawmakers in attendance.
 One of the  senators, who  also confirmed that the meetings were at the instance of the Presidency, however said most of them had made up their minds to defect to the APC.

The lawmakers, who also did not want his name in print,  added that apart from the meetings, Mark had made it a point to contact each of them daily  on the telephone,  advising them to remain in the PDP.
The senator said, “Already some of us have  made up  our  minds to defect and there is no amount of pressure that would stop us. We  will formally write the Senate president when we resume in January.
“However,  there are some of us who   believe  we could still listen to them. They have been discussing.  There  have  been meetings upon meetings which, from all clear indications, are at the instance of the Presidency.”
At  the moment, the PDP  has  73 senators   as against the APC’s 33, Labour Party’s three and one for the All Progressives Grand Alliance.
In the  House of Representatives however, members  who defected to the APC  have vowed not to return to the PDP despite alleged pressure on them to do so.
“No amount of pressure will force us back to PDP.  Our decision is a done deal and there is no point crying when the head is already off”, one of the  defectors, Mr. Zakari Mohammed, told The PUNCH in Abuja on Monday.
Mohammed, a lawmaker from Kwara State, is the Chairman, House Committee on Media and Public Affairs.
Thirty seven PDP   lawmakers  in the House had defected to the APC on  December 18, citing “factions” in  the ruling  party as   reason.
The development gave the APC a slim majority advantage over the PDP, with the former controlling 172 members, while the latter dropped to 171.
Findings showed that in a bid to compel them  to return to the party, the  defectors  had been put under pressure by the PDP and the Presidency.
One of them said, “They have used all sorts of tactics, including the carrot,  assuring us of  return tickets in 2015.
“They have used the political machinery in our  states and constituencies to get us  to comply, but it is not working.”
The PDP and the Presidency have since asked  the Speaker of the House, Aminu Tambuwal, and the Independent National Electoral Commission to declare the seats of the affected lawmakers vacant.
But, the lawmakers stated on Monday that they knew that such a thing was likely to happen, a reason they first obtained a court order stopping it before they defected.
Speaking on the issue, the Chairman, House Committee on Justice, Mr. Ali Ahmad, expressed surprise that, in spite of the subsisting court order, the Presidency was still bent on declaring their  seats vacant.
Ahmad, a defector, observed that as “recently as just days ago”, the Presidency was still talking of declaring their seats vacant.
He added, “For us, there is no point commenting on this threat other than to wait and watch.
“The matter is in court; the threat by the Presidency to declare our seats vacant is contemptuous of the court decision.
“That is the subject of the matter in court and the court has ruled that our seats should remain intact.
“Therefore, it is the highest level of contempt for the Presidency to be insisting that our seats should be declared vacant in disobedience to the court order.”
Ahmad argued that it would have been better for the Presidency to be “seeking some kind of  political solution to the problem, not to continue to insist on declaring our seats vacant as if a court order no longer means anything in this country.”
The lawmaker confirmed that the defectors were being continuously harassed, but he noted that “it will not work because we have passed that stage. Let them go to court.”

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