 Reactions have continued to trail President Mohamed Abu-Harris' non-assent to the reworked Electoral Act Amendment Bill into law. Aire Oladotun Hasan, who was a guest on the breakfast, speaks on the need for the Ninth Assembly to act in the interest of Nigerians and democracy. It's not even followed that they are playing. The issue at hand, I've said it earlier, this is the only party that brought Electoral Act reform as part of its manifesto and promises. The razor holds eye without horse-axing and dashing into our face and still blaming us that we are not, we are too docile to even act. It shows them the lack of law for a nation. It shows the largency of our political gladiators, the sincerity of our system. We elected you to serve. You are not to give us an excuse for your non-servants. National Assembly, that ought to be the checkmating institution, is more or less a rubber stamp. In democracy, protest demands are part of the correctional values that the people hold as trust. This is one of the significance that they give people the opium of respect that the only government, they employ the government, they give the government the legitimacy. This is what sovereignty really represents. It should even prove himself as a man of integrity. For us not to have an electoral law, what laws are we going to be using to come? The one in INAIC is not having a time table and nobody is trying to show us that this is the route to go. These are same terms of war. We still want to come on present moment to act in the interest.