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‘You Labelled Opponents As Wild Dogs’, Minority Leader Tackles Alake At Ministerial Screening

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Minority leader, Senator Simon Mwadkwon, has tackled the former Lagos Commissioner of Information and Strategy, Dele Alake, during his ministerial screening on the floor of the Senate.

Alake, who is one of the 28 ministerial nominees of President Bola Tinubu for screening, was the former Director of Strategic Communication of the All Progressives Congress (APC) Presidential Campaign Council.

The lawmaker from Plateau North Senatorial District claimed that Alake labelled supporters of opposition presidential candidates as “wild dogs” during the last presidential election.

Mwadkwon, “Mr nominee, a lot of accolades have been showered on you and from your CV (curriculum vitae), you’ve done credibly well for Nigeria, especially in the struggle for democracy. I’m convinced.

“Seated as Senators here, the issue of our political parties is secondary; we are Senators of the Federal Republic of Nigeria. I am saying this because of the question I want to ask you. Therefore, any question coming from me should be taken that it is coming from a Senator of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and not from the Minority Senate.

“My question is that: I heard you, sir, you said as a writer or as a journalist, you are an image maker, you speak out of inspiration and conviction… You’ve talked about social media too. I have read on social media your statement concerning other political parties during the election.”

The Senate President thereafter sustained the Point of Order by Adamu, and the Leader of the Senate, Opeyemi Bamidele, spoke for the Ekiti State caucus in the upper chamber.

Bamidele differed with Adamu and raised Order 55, Order 12, saying that no Senator will interrupt another Senator unless to call attention to a Point of Order or privilege suddenly arising.

“We are screening ministerial nominees, and we are not supposed to bring in issues that have come and gone,” Bamidele said, after which Akpabio upheld his Point of Order.

Mwadkwon later took to the floor and further asked the nominee to recite the second stanza of the national anthem.

Bamidele again tackled Mwadkwon and said that the Plateau Senator had brought politics into the screening by asking that Alake recite the national anthem that other nominees have not been asked to recite.

The Ekiti Central lawmaker asked Akpabio to expunge the request, and the Senate President did just so.

“We are here to do serious business on how to move this country forward and not necessarily to sing songs,” Akpabio said, adding that all lawmakers and nominees know the two stanzas of the national anthem by heart.

Addressing Alake, Akpabio said, “We have watched you over the years, and we don’t have any doubt about your capacity to handle any portfolio”.

The Senate President subsequently asked that Alake take a bow, and the gesture ended the about one-hour exercise.

He said: “I read a statement where you labelled supporters of a particular presidential candidate as ‘wild dogs’. Have you come across that statement? Are you aware of it? Did you say that?”

After Mwadkwon’s question, Senate President Godswill Akpabio urged his colleagues to avoid campaign issues, saying “campaigns are over” and “questions must be nationalistic and not partisan”.

Mwadkwon continued and insisted that Alake answer whether it is true or not that he labelled opponents of his principal as “wild dogs” during the electioneering process earlier this year.

However, Akpabio interjected and asked that his colleague move to his second question.

In the ensuing interruptions and murmurs from the floor, Senator Muhammed Adamu from Kebbi Central raised Order 55 that no Senator is allowed to make any noise or interrupt a speaking Senator.

He said there were so many interruptions from the “other side” whilst Mwadkwon was making his point.

Ige Olugbenga is a fine-grained journalist. He loves the smell of a good lead and has a penchant for finding out something nobody else knows.