The Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, Rep. Kingsley Chinda, representing PDP-Rivers has called for a return to the parliamentary system of government.
Chinda, who made the call on Monday in Abuja, said there was a need to practice a homegrown parliamentary system of government to address challenges facing the country.
The lawmaker explained that the current Presidential system of government was copied without recourse to native background.
According to him, the current system is skewed towards failure, considering our background, our experiences and our diversity which should be an advantage to us.
“When you look at the places where systems of government are copied from, they consider their culture, they consider their beliefs; they consider their society in adopting a system of government.
“But in Nigeria, we either copy from the UK or we copy from the U.S., without recourse to our background. And that is why we are asking for a homegrown system of government.
“We must twist it to consider our peculiar background. And that is why we say the time has come for us to move forward,” he said.
Chinda said that government after government had made efforts to cut the cost of governance in Nigeria.
He said that efforts made to merge agencies of government and to slash allowances and salaries of public office holders had not been achieved.
According to him, it is all motion without movement. We must do something fundamental if we want to move forward.
Chinda said efforts had been made to study why the parliamentary system practised in the first republic collapsed, saying that it was a result of ignorance.
He said the parliamentary system is cost-effective and self-cleansing, as it does not require much to remove a corrupt officer and make people in public office sit up.
DAILY POST reports that the Parliamentary system is a form of government in which the party with the greatest representation in the legislature forms the government with its leader becoming prime minister.
He said that efforts made to merge agencies of government and to slash allowances and salaries of public office holders had not been achieved.
According to him, it is all motion without movement. We must do something fundamental if we want to move forward.
Chinda said efforts had been made to study why the parliamentary system practised in the first republic collapsed, saying that it was a result of ignorance.
He said the parliamentary system is cost-effective and self-cleansing, as it does not require much to remove a corrupt officer and make people in public office sit up.
DAILY POST reports that the Parliamentary system is a form of government in which the party with the greatest representation in the legislature forms the government with its leader becoming prime minister.