
Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives, Benjamin Kalu has advocated for partnership with the United States government to support Nigeria’s efforts in promoting gender equity and electoral reforms.
Kalu made the call during during a meeting with a delegation from the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria led by Mr. David Frost, a political counsellor and Cassandra Carrony at the National Assembly on Wednesday in Abuja.
The deputy speaker, who also chairs the House Committee on Constitution Review said the collaboration would be on 3 key areas of technical expertise, advocacy and capacity building.
He emphasised the need to share comparative insights on gender responsive electoral systems; amplify stakeholder engagement with civil society, media, political parties and co-create a women’s legislative leadership programme to train future female lawmakers.
He said: “How do we partner with the US? We seek the US Embassy support in various areas, technical expertise, share comparative insight on gender responsive, electoral system. Let’s know how you’ve done it and succeeded; advocacy, amplify stakeholders engagement with civil society, media and political party.
“You already have structures. We can adopt those structures and make them to reflect what we want to achieve with this particular mission. It’s not a fanciful outing. It’s impact oriented. We need to capacitate those that will drive the impact and it’s through this strategic partnership.
“For traditional rulers, we are thinking as a committee to integrate them into constitution and assigning roles to them, to help enhancing national cohesion and unity.”
He cited the low representation of women in legislative seats nationwide, stressing that the constitution review committee has proposed adding special seats for women in the Senate, House of Representatives, and State Assemblies.
“Nigeria’s democracy remains incomplete so long as half its population – its women – are relegated to the sidelines. Today, women hold a mere 4% of legislative seats nationwide. In some states, like Kano and Sokoto, not a single woman sits in the State Assembly. This is not just a failure of representation; it is a failure of justice.
“As a result of our wide consultations and engagements with various stakeholders, the committee is resolved to adding one Special Seat per state in the Senate and the House of Representatives at the national level and one seat per senatorial district at the sub-national level.
“To correct this imbalance, we have introduced the Special Seats
Bill (HB 1349) – a 16-year Temporary Special Measure to reserve 182 additional legislative seats for women (37 Senate, 37 House, 108 State Assemblies). This bill addresses systemic barriers – financial exclusion, electoral violence, and patriarchal norms – by creating women-only constituencies”, he said.
He said: “You wanted to know how far we’ve gone in your speech, very soon we’ll go for public hearing and as our partners in the US, we want to let you know that as we advance our constitution review process, the committee has prioritised broad based public participation agenda, through series of zonal public hearings so that the voices of Nigerians from every region are heard and reflected”.
Earlier, the US delegation said their mission to the National Assembly was to explore areas of collaboration with the Deputy Speaker’s Office on the ongoing constitution review.
“We met with the Deputy Speaker very briefly when PLAC hosted event at the Hilton, about LG autonomy. It’s one of the things we are here to talk about. The focus here today is on the work of the Constitution Review Committee. The purpose of our visit is to further the collaboration we’ve had all these years. It’s important to maintain this connection and communication”, the delegation said.