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President Goodluck Jonathan on Wednesday  engaged some leaders of the Peoples Democratic Party in a meeting aimed at  taking a common position on the Tuesday defection of the Speaker of  the House  of Representatives, Aminu Tambuwal.
The meeting took place hours after the House  said the PDP, individuals and  groups condemning the defection of    the speaker to the All Progressives Congress should not dictate to it on how to  conduct its affairs.
Tambuwal had announced his defection from the  PDP before he adjourned sitting till December 3.
The situation made the President to summon the  National Chairman of the  PDP,   Adamu Mu’azu, to the meeting which  had the Deputy Speaker of the  House, Emeka Ihedioha; the Deputy Leader of the  House, Mr. Leo Ogor; and a member from Delta State, Ndudi Elumelu, in  attendance.
Some PDP governors such as Gabriel Suswam  (Benue); Godswill Akpabio (Akwa  Ibom); Seriake Dickson (Bayelsa): Ibrahim  Dankwabo (Gombe) and Sullivan  Chime (Enugu) were also part of the  meeting.
Top government officials who attended the  parley   included the Secretary  to the Government of the 
Federation, Anyim Pius Anyim; the National  Security  Adviser,   Sambo Dasuki; and the Attorney-General of the  Federation,  Mr. Muhammed Adoke (SAN).
One of those in attendance told one of our  correspondents on the condition  of anonymity that the meeting centered on how  to make Tambuwal vacate  his seat as speaker.
“The issue of the Speaker and his exit was one  of the fundamental issues discussed at the meeting,” he   said.
The source however did not disclose the  decision reached at the meeting.
Another source said that Ihedioha “took the  heat at the meeting.”
He did not explain further.
The presence of Adoke and Dasuki at the  meeting suggested that they might  have reviewed the legal and security  implications of the options  available to them with the two government  officials.
Earlier, Mu’azu had at another  meeting   the President had   with a delegation  of the  Federal Capital Territory Council of Chiefs,   dropped the hint  that  Jonathan summoned him.
“The  President had summoned me for a meeting.  I was with him when he wanted  to come and receive you and he told me to follow  you. I only did follow  follow,” he had told members of the delegation.
The PDP had shortly after Tambuwal announced  his defection called on him to do the needful by resigning as speaker.
The party, argued through its National  Publicity Secretary, Olisa Metuh,  that since Tambuwal became the speaker on the  ticket of the “majority  party (PDP), he had no right to continue to occupy the  seat.
But the House said on Tuesday that    the PDP and most of the commentators  on the issue were “ignorant” of the  provisions of the 1999 Constitution  (as amended) and the House Standing  Orders.
The   Chairman of the House  Committee on Media and Public Affairs,   Victor  Ogene, who spoke on  behalf of his colleagues,   said Tambuwal did not  breach any law in  defecting to the APC.
He also noted that there was no provision in  the constitution prescribing  that the speaker must be elected from among the  majority party members.
Ogene cited Section 50 (1)(b) of the  constitution to buttress his argument.
He said, “The clear provisions of Section  50(1) (b) of the Nigerian  Constitution easily settle the worries regarding the  continued  speakership of Tambuwal – ‘There shall be a Speaker and Deputy  Speaker  of the House of Representatives who shall be elected by the members of  that House from among themselves.’’’
He also noted that the speaker was elected as  the representative of the  “generality of Nigerians” and not necessarily because  he belonged to a  particular political party.
On the  views of some “commentators” that  Tambuwal should have vacated his  office by virtue of the provision of Section  68(1)(g) of the  constitution, he replied that the matter was still awaiting  judicial  decision.
Ogene added, “It is common  knowledge that  following the defection of 37 members of the House in  December 2013, from the  PDP to APC, there has been multiple court cases  on the matter, thus rendering  it subjudice to discuss any likely  outcome.
“Everyone is thus enjoined  to await the final  judicial pronouncement on the issue of defection,  which has afflicted virtually  all political parties in the land.”
He warned the PDP   against  interfering with the lawmakers’ “privilege”  and constitutionally-guaranteed  freedom to choose their leaders.
Ogene stated, “Additionally, Order 1, Rule 1  (2) of the Standing Orders of  the House of Representatives states: ‘ In all  cases not provided for  hereinafter, or by sectional or other Orders, precedents  or practices of the House, the House shall by resolution regulate its  procedure.’
“It is in the light of the foregoing that the  House wishes to appeal to  those who seek to regulate its procedure from outside  its hallowed  chambers to have a rethink, as the nation’s Constitution, the  Standing  Orders of the House and precedent – as in the Speakership of the late  Edwin Ume-Ezeoke in the Second Republic on a minority platform – have  all  provided answers to what would have otherwise been a knotty  political  issue.”
But as Ogene spoke, the PDP through its  National Vice-Chairman of the party in the  South-South, Dr. Cairo  Ojougboh,   vowed to do everything within its  powers to  regain   the speakership of the House.
Ojougboh told journalists at the national  headquarters of the party in Abuja  that there was no way Tambuwal and other  defectors from the party would  be allowed to go away with the party’s  mandate.
He said, “PDP is a very disciplined party. If  you come and steal in the  PDP and use the PDP to elevate yourself and get into  office when the  time comes, God will get you out like the issue of  Tambuwal.
“You can see how God has exposed him. PDP will  do everything within the law  to regain its seat and that is what we are going  to do in Edo and Rivers states as well. We are going back to the South-South to  regain our  seats.”

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