Cabinet Reshuffle: Buhari may drop 10 ministers
Already, two vacancies are existing in the ministerial portfolio, following the death of Barrister James Ocholi, the late Minister of State for Labour and Employment in March and the exit last week of the Minister of Environment, Amina Mohammed.
The Environment Minister is
leaving the present administration to take up the post of Deputy Secretary
General of the United Nations. Sources close to the Presidency and the National
Assembly said yesterday in Abuja that the Presidency was wary of a continuation
of recent bashing from the Senate, a situation that had seen a number of
nominees dropped during confirmation. Sources also said that the administration
has been inundated with reports that some Ministers are wrongly placed when the
appointments were made in 2015 while some others have been said to have shown
lack of capacity in the areas of operation. According to the source, two
factors were being joggled to come to a conclusion on who should go or remain
in the cabinet, adding that the Ministers that would soon leave the cabinet are
to cut across the geopolitical zones, an indication that the new names soon to
make their ways into the senate will also come from the different zones. A
source said that some rubbing of minds between the Presidency and the Senate
has taken place over the issue and that both the Senate and the Presidency have
pledged to work for the interest of the nation. In recent weeks, some of the
decisions of the Senate were said to have taken the Presidency by surprise, a
situation that was said to have forced the rapprochement.
Just last week, the Senate dropped the acting
Chairman of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), Ibrahim Magu
who was nominated for confirmation as substantive Chairman of the Commission.
The Senators had also taken some decisions including the earlier rejection of
Non-Career Ambassadorial list, some nominees into the Board of National Communications
Commission(NCC) and the Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) which the
senate initially described as “empty and unrealistic.”
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