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Abaribe Defends Withdrawal of Division on Electronic Transmission, Cites Legislative Strategy

Senator Enyinnaya Abaribe has defended his decision to withdraw a call for division during the Senate’s emergency plenary session convened to consider the contentious Clause 60 of the Electoral Act Amendment Bill, which addresses the electronic transmission of election results.
The emergency sitting was held amid heightened public attention and political tension over the future of electronic transmission within Nigeria’s electoral framework.
During deliberations, the Abia South lawmaker initially called for a division — a formal voting procedure used to clearly determine lawmakers’ positions on an issue. However, he later withdrew the request, a move that sparked criticism across media and political circles.
Responding to the backlash, Abaribe clarified that his action was not a retreat or compromise but a calculated legislative move aimed at safeguarding the broader objective of ensuring electronic transmission remains in the final version of the Electoral Act.
According to him, pushing for a division at that stage would likely have resulted in defeat due to the apparent numerical strength in the chamber. Such an outcome, he argued, could have significantly weakened the reform effort and potentially jeopardised the provision’s survival in subsequent stages of the legislative process.
Abaribe emphasised that the lawmaking process extends beyond Senate proceedings, noting that both chambers of the National Assembly must harmonise their versions of the bill before it is transmitted for presidential assent.
“Essentially, because the process involves harmonisation with the House of Representatives, it is only after the House of Representatives version is not approved that we can bring the sledge hammer of division,” he explained.
Under Nigeria’s legislative procedure, when the Senate and the House of Representatives pass differing versions of a bill, a harmonisation committee is constituted to reconcile discrepancies. It is at this stage that contentious clauses are negotiated and finalised.
Political observers suggest that forcing a division prematurely could have resulted in a recorded defeat that might weaken the Senate’s bargaining power during harmonisation. By withdrawing the motion, Abaribe appears to have opted for strategic timing, preserving the option of a decisive vote if the harmonisation process threatens the inclusion of electronic transmission.
The episode underscores the delicate balance between public expectations for assertive legislative action and the often complex, tactical nature of parliamentary strategy.
As debates over electoral reform continue, electronic transmission remains a central issue tied to electoral transparency, credibility, and public trust. The forthcoming harmonisation between the Senate and the House of Representatives will determine the final outcome of Clause 60 and the future of electronic transmission in Nigeria’s electoral law.

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