With the jostle for the Office of the Speaker of the House of Representatives intensifying, the All Progressives Congress (APC) has reportedly adopted a “cautious approach to zoning formula.”
This is as a result of the governing party recording the highest number of aspirants for the office.
Sources revealed to The Nation that the number might increase given the ongoing coalition talks by the opposition parties, which have about 186 Representatives-Elect following the death of a new member yesterday.
The source said one of the strategies of the coalition is to present a joint candidate for the Office of Speaker based on a projection that the 13 APC aspirants may split their votes with Representative-Elect, Abdulmumin Jibrin of the New Nigeria Peoples Party (NNPP) likely to emerge the candidate of the opposition for the post.
The top source said: “We are studying the situation and at APC level doing some permutations which may lead to zoning. It is not as easy as the President of the Senate, Ahmad Lawan, is saying.
“Unlike in the 8th and 9th National Assembly, 13 heavyweight aspirants want to be the next Speaker. The party is adopting a cautious approach to its zoning formula in order to get it right.
“And what is making it complex is that 284 out of the 360 members that will determine the next Speaker are first-time lawmakers in the House. The implication is that the race is likely to be an open type.
“It may be difficult for APC leadership to breathe down on the new Representatives. And the old ones who can provide guidance are not many.
“For instance, only 45 APC House members returned, and 25 PDP House members re-elected. Out of the returning lawmakers, 13 want to be Speaker.
“Already, there is intense lobbying of the Representatives-Elect by aspirants with war chest. We may have a repeat of the Bukola Saraki episode of 2015 if we are not proactive.
“The tussle for National Assembly principal offices by the North-West and the North-Central is posing a threat to the choice of a new Speaker.
“The North-West is seeking the slot for its role in supporting Tinubu. But the North-Central, which has never produced a Speaker, is stronger in its agitation with Ahmed Idris Wase (Plateau-North Central); Chairman, House Committee on Navy, Yusuf Adamu Gagdi (Plateau, North Central); and the Chairman, House Committee on Emergency and Disaster Preparedness, Abdulraheem Olawuyi (Kwara, North Central).
“Wase, who stepped down for Gbajabiamila in 2019, is pressing for the honouring of the alleged unwritten agreement to concede the slot to the North-Central.