By Abdulrahman Aliagan, Abuja
In the grand chambers of Nigeria’s Senate, where history is made and the fate of millions is shaped, a battle rages—not against the country’s crumbling economy, deepening insecurity, or growing social unrest, but against a single senator. The six-month suspension of Kogi Central’s Senator Natasha Akpoti-Uduaghan has sparked an internal crisis, revealing cracks in a legislative body that appears to be drifting further from its primary responsibilities.
While bandits terrorize villages, inflation chokes the average Nigerian, and youth unemployment reaches alarming levels, the Senate has been engrossed in what now seems like a personal vendetta. The controversy over Akpoti-Uduaghan’s suspension has exposed procedural irregularities, allegations of political intimidation, and a troubling shift away from the real issues affecting Nigerians.
The drama began on March 6, when the Senate, acting on the recommendations of its Committee on Ethics, Privileges, and Public Petitions, suspended Akpoti-Uduaghan for alleged misconduct during a plenary session. The punishment was severe—six months of exclusion, withdrawal of security aides, closure of her office, and a ban on representing herself as a senator. But as details of the report emerged, so did allegations of foul play.
Several senators, whose signatures were attached to the report, claimed they had never endorsed it. According to them, they had merely signed an attendance register, not a resolution. In a shocking revelation, some lawmakers distanced themselves from the committee’s findings, arguing that they had not been given the opportunity to review the final report before it was presented on the Senate floor.
The disagreement over whether attendance equates to endorsement exposed the chaotic decision-making process in the Senate. But beyond the procedural controversy lies a much bigger issue—the complete detachment of Nigeria’s legislative body from the pressing challenges confronting the nation.
While senators argued over seating arrangements and signatures, Nigerians struggled with skyrocketing food prices, worsening insecurity, and a healthcare system on the brink of collapse. Instead of debating policies to curb economic hardship, the Senate invested valuable time and energy into internal power struggles.
Considering the insecurity, across Nigeria, reports of kidnappings, banditry, and insurgency have become daily headlines. From the North to the South, families live in fear as terrorists and criminal gangs operate with impunity. Instead of tackling this crisis with urgent legislative action, the Senate was busy suspending one of its own.
Also, economic Hardship, Inflation has pushed the cost of living to unbearable heights, yet there have been no serious debates on economic relief measures, job creation strategies, or policies to strengthen local industries.
Without any doubt, education and healthcare sectors have been neglected, Nigerian universities remain underfunded, and doctors are leaving the country in droves due to poor wages and working conditions. Where is the Senate’s conversation on reversing the brain drain? Where are the policies to improve access to quality education?
Instead of championing these issues, lawmakers spent weeks embroiled in a controversy that should never have escalated to this level.
Akpoti-Uduaghan’s suspension is not an isolated event. The Nigerian Senate has developed a habit of prioritizing political theatrics over governance. From budget-padding scandals to unnecessary foreign trips, the Senate seems more preoccupied with self-serving matters than with addressing the crises that threaten the country’s stability.
For many Nigerians, this latest scandal is just another example of how disconnected their leaders have become. When a senator is penalized for alleged seating arrangement violations, but terrorists roam freely, it becomes clear that the priorities of the legislature do not align with the realities of ordinary citizens.
The Senate has a choice: continue down this path of internal squabbles and political distractions or refocus on the issues that truly matter. The Nigerian people are watching. Every day wasted on power struggles is another day of suffering for millions.
If the Senate truly wants to restore its credibility, it must rise above personal disputes and tackle the real problems—security, economic hardship, education, and healthcare. Otherwise, history will remember this assembly not as a body of lawmakers but as a theater of misplaced priorities.
In the end, Nigerians are not asking for much—just a Senate that remembers why it exists in the first place.