According to Femi Gbajabiamila, performance was less important than ethnicity and religion in the presidential and National Assembly elections.

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According to Femi Gbajabiamila, performance was less important than ethnicity and religion in the presidential and National Assembly elections.
Femi Gbajabiamila, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, claimed that performance was secondary to ethnicity and religion in the just ended presidential and National Assembly elections.


When members of the House of Representatives Press Corps, led by its chairman Grace Ike, paid him a visit at his office, Gbajabiamila made this statement.


He claimed that many of the former members of the house were "unlucky" because voters chose representatives based more on their race and religion than on how well they served their constituents and the house.

He said...

It was a hard-won battle not just for me, but for many of our colleagues on the floor there. All 360 of us. Many were unlucky. Some were lucky. I used the word ‘lucky’ deliberately because this election was not as it should be, not so much about the performance of members whether on the floor or in their constituencies. It was about a lot of other things. It was about religion. It was about ethnicity.

It was about so many other things which I hope that as we develop as a nation, one’s election would be based solely, or at least mostly on his or her performance on the floor and in the constituency. That is what I hope would happen as we move along and that is why he mentioned the Electoral Act that was just passed. That is why I fought tooth and nail to make sure the Electoral Act adopted strictly the direct mode for primaries because of elections. So we lost a lot of legislators even at the primaries level, and that does not help our democracy.

So hopefully moving forward, we would perfect that document, the Electoral Act, which many people have celebrated but still not perfect yet.

Hopefully we would be able to perfect it. So I thank you profusely for all the support you have given us, myself, the leadership and the House. Over the years, the last four years, you are part of this institution and I have enjoyed working with. I would continue to enjoy working with you. As many of you know, I would probably be a floor member now, which is how our democracy works.

But being a floor member is not about what position you occupy but it is about what you contribute to law making and governance and I will continue to do that irrespective of wherever I find myself.

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