“Thus, in a press statement credited to the National
Assembly last week, it was reported that ‘The Federal High Court has ruled that
the National Assembly has the power to increase or review upward the budget
estimates laid before it by the executive.’
“With respect, the
summary of the decision of the Court by the National Assembly is grossly
misleading.”
“On the contrary, the Federal High Court made it categorically clear
that the National Assembly lacks the legislative powers to prepare ‘budget
estimates’ for the President or ‘disregard the budget proposals laid before it
and substitute it with its own estimates’.”
“The incontestable
statement has since been twisted to give the very erroneous impression that the
power of the National Assembly to increase the budget has been judicially
recognised.
Human rights lawyer, Mr. Femi Falana (SAN), on Tuesday
faulted the claim that a Federal High Court in Abuja had, last year, affirmed
the power of the National Assembly to increase budgetary estimates submitted to
it by the President.
Falana was the plaintiff in the suit in which Justice
Gabriel Kolawole delivered the judgment cited by those who believed that the
power of the National Assembly to alter the executive’s budgetary estimates had
been recognised by the court.
He also said he had initiated an appeal to challenge the
dismissal of the suit.
He said, “Even though I have taken the legal battle over the
dismissal of the case to the Court of Appeal, I wish to state, without any fear
of contradiction, that the learned trial judge concurred with my submission
that the Constitution has not vested the National Assembly with powers to
increase the budget.”
Although Falana said Justice Kolawole stated in the judgment
that the National Assembly was not expected to be a ‘rubber stamp parliament,’
the senior lawyer alleged that the statement of the judge was twisted to give a
“misleading” impression that the power of the National Assembly to increase
budgetary estimates had been recognised by court.
He said, “No doubt, the learned trial judge said the
National Assembly is not a rubber stamp parliament.
Falana who quoted the relevant portions of Justice
Kolawole’s judgment, said by acknowledging that the National Assembly was not a
rubber stamp parliament, the court recognised the duty of the legislature “to
debate and make its informed inputs” into the the President’s budget proposals.
But he said nowhere in the judgment did the court say “that
the National Assembly has the power to increase or insert new items like
constituency projects into the budget estimates contained in any Appropriation
Bill or Supplementary Bill prepared and submitted to it by the President.”
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