The Presidency on Sunday called on the National Assembly to stop
threatening President Goodluck Jonathan with impeachment.
Senior Special Assistant to the President on Public
Communication, Dr. Doyin Okupe, stated this at a press briefing in Abuja.
Okupe said there was no way there wouldn’t be friction between
the executive and the legislature but cautioned that every disagreement should
not lead to impeachment threat.
He said, “We would want to appeal to our respected lawmakers to
sheathe their swords. They should stop threatening the President with
impeachment every time there is a disagreement.
“They should allow the temperature of the polity to come down.
We will continue to have executive/legislative conflict, but we should continue
to allow maturity to come in.
“Yes, the legislature has the power to impeach, but we should
not be flaunting this every time.
“We should forget about impeachment in order to build this
democracy; conflict will always be there, but we must manage it.”
Asked why it was difficult for the President to implement
the resolutions passed by the National Assembly, Okupe said the action of
the President was not meant to spite the lawmakers.
He also called on Nigerians to stop disparaging the office of
the President.
Okupe said this in reaction to the comments credited to
the Convener, Save Nigeria Group, Pastor Tunde Bakare, describing
Jonathan’s condemnation of the protest that greeted the
January 1 removal of subsidy on petrol as “bunkum”.
Jonathan had said the protest was sponsored by unnamed
people, and that Nigerians were not totally against the policy of government.
But both Bakare and Nobel Laureate Prof. Wole Soyinka
condemned the President’s statement.
While Bakare described it as “bunkum”, Soyinka said it had shown
that the President “is lamentably alienated from the true pulse of the nation
and that he was suffering from bad conscience”.
Okupe said, “The office of the President deserves respect. To
say the President is suffering from bad conscience as stated by Prof. Soyinka
is wrong.
“His (Jonathan’s) action on the N5,000 note showed that he loves
Nigerians and he is not alienated from them.
“We do not need to desecrate the office of the
President. It is uncivil for Bakare to say that the President’s comment is
bunkum, which means nonsense.
“We will not accept that; we won’t allow anyone to be insulting
the office of the President. Bakare himself can be President tomorrow.”
He called on the opposition to learn from former Lagos
State Governor Bola Tinubu, who he said, did not disparage the President when
he visited the United States recently where he spoke on the policies of
his administration.
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