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Ndume Says Senate Only Confirms Nominees, Not Screens Them — Clarifies After Forgery Row

IDNN Politics & Governance Desk

Chief Whip of the Senate, Ali Ndume, has clarified that the upper chamber’s constitutional function in appointments is to confirm, not screen, nominees for public office. The clarification follows renewed criticism of the Senate after a ministerial nominee faced allegations of certificate forgery post-confirmation.

Speaking with reporters in Abuja, Ndume said the Senate acts on background checks provided by security agencies and the Department of State Services (DSS). > “We don’t conduct forensic verification; that is the job of security institutions. Our responsibility is to debate competence and integrity based on information supplied to us,” he explained.

Nigerian Senate considers bill to hold all elections on one day to cut costs
Our responsibility is to debate competence and integrity based on information supplied to us

Ndume called for stronger coordination between the executive and security services to avoid future embarrassments. He urged media commentators to “differentiate between confirmation and clearance to serve.”


LEGISLATIVE RESPONSIBILITY DEBATE

The comment has reignited debate on legislative oversight quality. Critics say limiting screening to presentation and voice vote reduces the Senate’s credibility. Constitutional lawyers cite Section 147(6) and Rule 120 of Senate Standing Orders, urging procedural reform to mandate document scrutiny for sensitive offices.


OVERSIGHT BOX

🔹 Public confidence in appointments at 41% — IDNN Poll (Oct 2025).
🔹 2 ministerial screenings pending under review.
🔹 Legal community pushes for joint verification committee with DSS and INEC.


MORAL FIRESTORM

Ndume’s remark highlights Nigeria’s legislative ambiguity on accountability. The debate echoes a larger theme across the pardon and governance discourse — where institutions shrink their moral authority under technical definitions of duty.


THE BRAND OF INTEGRITY

In politics, credibility is currency. For the Senate, perceived weakness in oversight translates to low institutional valuation. Reforms that restore public trust have direct impact on investor confidence in policy continuity. Transparency remains the most valuable political asset a parliament can trade.


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