We have the right to add, subtract and adjust the budget – Ndume

Senate Leader, Ali Ndume, on Friday said the National Assembly has the constitutional right to “add or subtract” from the budget, stating that it is within their constitutional powers.

He said this while talking about the current altercation between a former Chairman of the House of Representatives’ Committee on Appropriation, Abdulmumin Jibrin, and the Speaker, Yakubu Dogara, on alleged padding of the 2016 Budget.

Ndume spoke with State House correspondents when he joined five other lawmakers to observe the Jumat prayer with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja.

He described the altercation as a mere media hype.

He said what lawmakers did to the budget was to “add, subtract and adjust” according to their constitutional duty.

He said if federal lawmakers were not empowered by the constitution to tinker with budget, there would not have been any reason for the President to submit the document to the National Assembly.

Ndume said, “The issue of budget padding is more of a media hype than reality. We are not doing budget now, we only have Appropriation Act which is a law and you know the process of implementing a law.

“I do not know where the issue of this budget padding we are talking about is coming from. If we are not to tinker with the budget as submitted by the President, then there would not have been the need to submit it to the National Assembly.

“We have the constitutional duty to add, subtract and adjust. That was what was done. This is the first time we did a budget that was collectively produced in the sense that it was done in such a way that the Senate, House of Representatives and the Executive played different parts.

“This time, the President took his time to ensure that he did not only sign on the budget, but also signed on budget details that he is satisfied with.

“What is happening now is a fallout between individuals, it is more of personal thing between Dogara and Jibrin.

“That is not the way differences should be settled. We have an in-house process that is followed if we have such issues.”

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