PDP to APC: You can’t sanction Dogara,
Saraki
The
Peoples Democratic Party has dismissed threats by the All Progressives
Congress against the new leaders of the National Assembly as empty
boasts aimed to cover its naivety, inexperience and unpreparedness for
governance.
The party
was reacting to the threat made by the APC that it was considering
meting out punishment to the Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki, and
the Speaker of House of Representatives, Yakubu Dogara, for refusing to
abide by the directive of the ruling party not to contest the leadership
of the two chambers.
However,
Saraki, Dogara, and other leadership of the National Assembly defied the
directive of the party by colluding with the PDP members in the
assembly.
The ruling party issued a statement on Tuesday, saying those who ganged up against its directive would be punished.
But the PDP said there was no way the APC could punish the legislators.
It also
admonished the APC to shed its arrogance, eat the humble pie and get
more organised for governance adding that it lacks the capacity,
capability and means to sanction duly elected leaders of the National
Assembly.
PDP
National Publicity Secretary, Chief Olisa Metuh, in a statement in Abuja
on Wednesday, alleged that “the crass inexperience so far displayed by
the APC is a pointer that it is not adequately equipped to handle the
affairs of government at the center.”
He added that events would continue to prove the PDP right in this regard.
Metuh
said, “Nothing can be more astonishing than the whining by the APC that
the PDP at the last minute expressed its preference for Saraki and
Dogara as Senate President and Speaker of the House of Representatives
respectively, after it had earlier stated that it was not interested in
the positions.
“This
calls to question the capacity, experience and skills of APC leaders on
political matters and we have no apology whatsoever for their naivety.
“The APC
is merely suffering the consequences of the greed, lust for power and
inordinate ambitions of their leaders. They should note that Nigerians
have since moved ahead with the new leaders in the National Assembly and
stop wasting their energy on propaganda and blackmails to heat up the
polity.”
Metuh
further condemned Tuesday’s alleged attempts to close the National
Assembly and stop lawmakers from carrying out their constitutional
duties, as well as the threats to the newly elected leaders as “totally
against the tenets of democracy, the principles of separation of powers
and independence of the legislature as enshrined in the constitution.”
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