SENATE

Senate plans 2 weeks plenary suspension to scrutinise 2025 budget

The Nigeria Senate, on Monday, announced plans to suspend the plenary for two weeks starting from January 14, 2025, as both chambers of the National Assembly geared to focus on committee-level considerations of the proposed N49.7 trillion 2025 budget.

Chairman of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, Senator Solomon Olamilekan Adeola (APC, Ogun West), who disclosed this during a meeting with the chairmen of the Senate Standing Committees, revealed that Thursday, January 9, has been set as an open day for stakeholders’ inputs on the budget, including presentations from the heads of Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs).

He also stated that January 31 has been tentatively set as the date for presenting reports on the 2025 Appropriation Bill to both the Senate and the House of Representatives at plenary. However, he noted that the timeline was subject to adjustment depending on the progress of deliberations.

Speaking at the meeting, which was attended by principal officers of the Senate such as Deputy Leader Senator Lola Ashiru (APC, Kwara South) and Senate Whip Senator Tahir Monguno (APC, Borno North), Adeola acknowledged the tight timeframe for the budget process but emphasised the need for thorough consideration of the 2025 Money Bill.

READ ALSO: House of reps begin 2025 budget defence by MDAs Tuesday

“Following the presentation of the 2025 budget by President Bola Tinubu on December 18, 2024, and its subsequent second reading in both chambers on December 19, hard copies of the proposals have been distributed to committee chairmen as reference documents for the budget defense sessions,” he said.

Adeola outlined the timeline for the budget review as follows: January 9: Open day for stakeholder inputs; January 9–18: Budget defence sessions with MDAs; January 15–18: Submission of reports by various committees; January 19–30: Collation and review of reports by the Appropriations Committee, January 31: Tentative date for laying the final report before the Senate and House.

Despite the tight schedule, Adeola stressed the importance of balancing efficiency with thoroughness. “The 31st of January is a tentative date meant to guide our work,” he added.

Source: LEADERSHIP

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