The Senate, on Thursday, went into an emergency executive session following a heated disagreement over the official sitting time of the Red Chamber, reports The Nigerian Tribune.
The disagreement involved the Senate President, Godswill Akpabio, and his predecessor, Senator Ahmed Lawan, over the timing of the plenary sessions.
According to the Senateβs rules, the official commencement time is 10 am.
However, it has reportedly become routine for sessions to start much later, often around 11 am or even later, as lawmakers trickle in late.
Traditionally, the Senate adjourns its sittings for the day with plans to reconvene at 11 am the next legislative day, despite the official start time being 10 am.
On Thursday, the Senate sought to formally amend its rules to shift the official sitting time from 10 am to 11 am.
This motion was brought forward by Senate Leader, Opeyemi Bamidele.
As the Senate moved to deliberate on the amendment, Lawan opposed the proposal.
He challenged Akpabio, arguing that the reason for changing the sitting timeβto synchronise with the House of Representativesβwas not convincing or βscientificβ enough.
He insisted that there were no substantial reasons to shift the sitting time and highlighted that lawmakers were more energetic in the early hours, making a 10 am start more productive.
βThe explanation that the change was to enable the Senate to synchronise its sitting time with that of the House of Representatives is not saleable to senators,β Lawan stated.
He added that pushing the sitting time to 11 am would extend the sessions till 3 pm, a time when committees should be actively working.
Akpabio responded, reminding Lawan that the 11 am practice was inherited from Lawanβs 9th Senate.
Lawan, however, refuted this, stating, βNo, that is not correct!β Akpabio also clarified that starting at 11 am did not necessarily mean sessions would last until 3 pm.
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