Presidency Signals Legislative Urgency
President Bola Tinubu has called on the National Assembly to prioritise constitutional amendments that would permit the creation of state-controlled police forces, reviving one of Nigeria’s most consequential governance debates.
The State Police Constitutional Push, long discussed but repeatedly stalled, is now being positioned as a central plank in addressing rural insecurity and overstretched federal policing capacity.
Speaking during a policy engagement in Abuja, the President emphasised the need for structural solutions to persistent security gaps across states.
Lawmakers Indicate Readiness
Senate leadership responded by signalling that executive-sponsored bills on state policing would receive due consideration, assuring that reform proposals would not be delayed procedurally.
The move suggests institutional alignment between the executive and legislative branches on at least initiating the amendment process.
However, constitutional reform in Nigeria requires extensive debate, committee scrutiny and approval thresholds at both federal and state levels.
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Federal Control vs Subnational Authority
At the centre of the State Police Constitutional Push lies a foundational question: should policing remain exclusively federal, or should states be granted autonomous security structures?
Supporters argue that decentralised policing would enhance intelligence gathering, local accountability and rapid response in remote communities.
Critics warn of political misuse, uneven funding capacity and the risk of state-level coercion if safeguards are weak.
The debate therefore extends beyond security — it touches the architecture of Nigerian federalism.
Security Pressure Driving Reform Calls
Renewed advocacy for state policing coincides with mounting pressure over rural banditry, insurgency-linked attacks and communal violence in various regions.
Proponents argue that a centralised force struggles to adequately cover Nigeria’s vast terrain and diverse security challenges.
Opponents counter that reforming funding, training and coordination within the existing federal structure may yield better results than structural fragmentation.
Constitutional Hurdles Ahead
Amending the 1999 Constitution requires a two-thirds majority in the National Assembly and ratification by at least two-thirds of state Houses of Assembly.
That threshold ensures that the State Police Constitutional Push cannot advance without broad political consensus.
For now, the executive’s renewed call has shifted the issue from theoretical debate back into legislative focus.
Whether momentum translates into amendment will depend on coalition-building across political lines.
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