- Safiu Kehinde
The Delta House of Assembly has on Tuesday declared the Udu Constituency seat vacant after the lawmaker representing the constituency, Collins Ogbetamah, dumped the All Progressives Congress (APC) for the Nigeria Democratic Congress (NDC).
Ogbetamah had announced his defection from the APC to NDC in a resignation letter tendered before the assembly.
As contained in the letter dated June 19 and read by the Speaker of the State House of Assembly, Mr Dennis Guwor, Ogbetamah formally notified the house of his defection.
Following deliberations, Majority Leader of the assembly, Dr Emeka Nwaobi invoked relevant provisions of the 1999 Constitution, as amended, moving a motion declaring the seat vacant and requesting INEC to conduct a by-election.
The motion received unanimous support from lawmakers before the speaker officially declared the seat vacant, affirming that the decision complied fully with constitutional provisions governing legislative defections and vacancies.
During Tuesday’s plenary, the house also passed the State Public and Private Properties Protection Amendment Bill through second reading, after lawmakers overwhelmingly endorsed its general principles and objectives.
According to reports, the proposed amendment seeks to strengthen property protection, recover public assets, establish an enforcement task force, and collaborate with security agencies across Delta effectively.
Consequently, the speaker referred the amendment bill to the Joint House Committees on Housing, Urban Renewal, Lands and Survey, directing members to submit their report before July 17.
The assembly also received the 2025 audited financial statements and reports of the state’s 25 local government areas from office of the Auditor-General for Local Government during plenary.
Guwor referred the audit reports to the House Committee on Public Accounts for detailed consideration, reinforcing the assembly’s oversight responsibilities and commitment to accountability across local government administration statewide.
