Ekweremadu Advocates Unicameral Assembly, Single-Term Rotational Presidency
A Former
Deputy President of the Senate, Ike Ekweremadu, has stated his desire to see a
Nigeria constitution with a unicameral assembly and a single term rotational
presidency in the ongoing amendment of the 1999 Constitution
Ekweremadu,
who was the guest speaker made the call on Monday in Lagos while speaking at
Nigerian Bar Association (NBA) Ikeja Branch Law Week 2021 with the theme “The
Nigeria of Our Dreams.”
The Current Chairman
of the Senate Committee on Electoral Reforms and Constitutional Amendment, said
that he had long advocated for a single presidential term of five or six years.
Speaking on
the need to have a unicameral assembly and single term president, the lawyer
turned politician said that it will help the country reduce the cost of
governance
“This will
help us circumvent the distractions, manipulations, divisiveness, and excesses
that come with the quest for a second term of executive offices.
“It will as
well ensure that power rotates more frequently among the various sections and
groups.
“If people
are sure that it will get to them, the struggle for it by various sections will
be less desperate.
“Besides, it
is better if every President or Governor understands that he or she has only a
single term to begin and complete all his or her good works,” he said.
Ekweremadu
said that this model had worked for some Latin American democracies in the
1970s when they faced similar challenges of excessive contestation for power.
He said that
some Latin American countries adopted the model for a fixed period of time and
had since reverted to two presidential terms after their democracies
stabilised.
“Some others
such as Mexico still operate a single term of six years,” he said.
Ekweremadu
noted that a region’s access or lack of access to political power affected
public attitude and sense of belonging in governance and democracy.
He said that
there was nothing to prove that sections of Nigeria that produced presidents or
military Heads of State were better off than those that had not.
“Save the
patronage enjoyed by a privileged few, rotational presidency is nevertheless
imperative in our African environment where ethno-religious and sectional
sentiments are still high,” he said.
“So, in the
higher and long-term national interest, it is time to revisit and entrench the
idea of rotational presidency.”

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