Lagos—Governor Akinwunmi Ambode of Lagos State’s hope to swear in members of his cabinet next
Monday was dashed yesterday as the members of the Lagos State House of Assembly
adjourned sitting till October 13 without screening the nominees.
Ambode last Monday sent a list of commissioner and special
adviser-nominees to the House for screening.
However, against the norm, the house set up a 15-man
committee that will screen the nominees.
A statement from the governor’s office when the list was sent to the Assembly said the governor
was expected to swear in the new
commissioners and special advisers on October 5, with the anticipation
that the nominees would have been screened immediately after the Sallah
holidays.
“The screening of the list is expected to commence
immediately after the Sallah holidays while cleared cabinet members would be sworn-in to resume the task of governance
by Monday, October 5, 2015,” the statement said.
But on the floor of the Assembly yesterday, the House simply set up a 15-man
ad-hoc committee to secretly screen the nominees and make recommendations to
the general house.
Speaker of the House, Mudashiru Obasa, immediately after
setting up the committee, explained to shocked guests and newsmen at the
gallery that the decision to set up the committee, which is not the norm, was
collectively taken by the lawmakers during parliamentary meeting.
While the ad-hoc committee to screen the nominees is headed
by the Deputy Speaker of the House, Wasiu Eshilokun-Sanni, other members
include Deputy Majority Leader, Olumuyiwa Jimoh, Chief Whip, Rotimi Abiru,
Deputy Chief Whip, Omotayo Oduntan, Minority Leader, Akeem Bello.
Others are Victor Akande, Lanre Ogunyemi, Rotimi Olowo,
Yinka Ogundimu, Mohammed Folajimi, Bisi Yusuf, Oladele Adekanye, Ibrahim
Layode, Segun Olulade, and Dayo Fafunmi.
Obasa said the committee would first screen the nominees
before presenting its report to the House when it reconvenes on October 13.
The Speaker said the decision to first screen the nominees
before they would face another screening by the general House was because the
House rules permit the lawmakers to work at their convenience.
However, some lawmakers, who confided in Vanguard even
before the sitting said the screening would not take place because the members
had some grudges against the governor especially as it seemed the governor was
dictating the pace at which they should work.
One of the lawmakers, who pleaded anonymity said the
screening would be delayed to send a signal to the governor to stop giving the
impression that the House is a rubber stamp.
When contacted, Olulade, who served the seventh Assembly as
chairman of the Committee on Information and Publicity, said the screening
committee was to ensure proper screening of the nominees.
He explained further that it would be tiring screening the
37 nominees on the floor of the House since it would get to a stage where
members would simply begin to ask nominees to ‘take a bow and leave.’
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