National Assembly has powers to alter budget – Dogara
National
Assembly has powers to alter budget – Dogara 
            The
Speaker of the House of Representatives, Mr Yakubu Dogara, on Thursday
said that the National Assembly has powers to alter national budget according
to the desire of the citizens. He stated this during plenary after Rep.
Abubakar Lawal (APC- Adamawa) drew the attention of the lower chamber to Acting
President Yemi Osinbajo’s remarks.
Osinbajo’s
was reported in the media to have said that the power of appropriation was
vested with the executive.
According to Dogara, it is left to the judiciary to interpret which arm of the government has the powers to alter the budget according to the Constitution.
“This
issue is left to the judiciary to interpret to us as to what arm of government
has power to do what. For me, this is not an issue we should dwell so much on.
 “I don’t want to believe that the Acting
President made that statement because when it comes to the budget, the power of
the purse rests with the parliament.
“The
executive is just one man; every other person in the executive arm is
answerable to the president alone. The relationship is that of master and
servant, but for the parliament, it is that of equals.\
 “Even, when the president hasn’t said
anything, everyone is trying to read what the body language is; the basis of
democracy is collaboration.
 “In the case of the budget, if the parliament
disagrees with the executive, the worst that would happen is that they will
refuse to sign the budget.
 “In that case, we can override the veto of the
President and pass it into law. “The worse the Executive can say is that they
will not implement. The question then will be, is that the law of the land?
Anyone with honour, who is in the seat, should know the right thing to be done
“In
case of the executive, everyone knows the consequence and I don’t want to
mention it by its name.
 “This house is not going to be a rubber stamp to the
executive arm.
 “In the United States where we borrowed our Constitution from,
once the president walks into the chamber with the budget proposal, it becomes
dead on arrival.
 “It is therefore what the parliament decides
that brings it back to life. 
“The
priority of the people may not be that of the executive. This kind of talk
is not helpful, so we shouldn’t even take a debate on the issue,” Dogara said
.
Earlier,
mover of the motion, Lawal, stated that the acting president’s speech had
undermined the powers of the national assembly. 
“I
read in the media where the acting president was quoted as saying that the
national assembly does not have the powers to alter the country’s budget.
 “This will undermine the powers that sections
4, 5 and 9 of the Constitution have given the National Assembly, the power to
make laws.
 “Order 12(19) spells out the procedure, so for
someone to come out and say that we have no power, it’s a breach of our
privilege,’’ 
he
said. Osibanjo had while signing the 2017 Appropriation Bill on Monday stated
that the alteration of the budget by the national assembly had distorted the
plans of the executive in implementing the 2017 budget