Presidency: Lawyers clear the air on the 25% requirement in FCT

Presidency: Lawyers clear the air on the 25% requirement in FCT

DAILY TRUST 

Lawyers have expressed divergent views on the need for a presidential candidate to fulfill 25 per cent of votes cast in at least two-thirds of the 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory (FCT) to be declared president of Nigeria. 

Speaking on the matter, a former Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice in Ekiti State, Dayo Akinlaja (SAN), said the requirements do not make it mandatory for a candidate to win the presidential election in FCT in addition to the two-thirds of the 36 states.

“My take is that if the intention had been to make securing 25 per cent in the FCT a distinct condition precedent, it would have been so distinctly and separately stated in the constitution. The way it is now, all a candidate needs do is to secure 25 per cent in two-thirds of 37 units. Once that is done, there is a valid election,” he said.

Also speaking, a human rights activist, Femi Falana (SAN), said a candidate could be declared winner of a presidential election without necessarily scoring up to 25 per cent of votes cast in the FCT. 

Falana said since section 299 of the constitution said the FCT shall be treated like a state, “the constitutional requirements for 25 per cent of votes in two-thirds state and the FCT only means that the FCT be added to the 36 states to arrive at 37 states.”  

Similarly, Tawo Eja Tawo (SAN) said having 25 per cent in the FCT is not a compulsory requirement for the presidency, adding that section 134(2) of the Nigerian Constitution does not recognise the FCT as a state. 

He said the requirement for 25 per cent of two-thirds of 36 states and the FCT envisages that the FCT has to be added to the 36 to become 37…

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