A review of the Senate Bills Progression Chart from June, 2023 to April, 2026 indicates uneven legislative productivity in the 10th Senate, with a small group of lawmakers sponsoring most bills while many others record minimal outputs, raising questions about engagement, effectiveness and representation in the upper chamber system performance. Sunday Aborisade reports.

As the 10th Senate reached the third year of its four-year tenure mandate on June 12, a detailed review of legislative records covering June 2023 to April 2026 obtained by THISDAY, suggests a marked concentration of bill sponsorship among a relatively small number of lawmakers, with a significant portion of senators recording limited legislative initiatives during the period under review.

The Senate Bills Progression Chart, which tracks legislative activity across hundreds of bills introduced within the period, presents a picture of uneven participation in one of the legislature’s core constitutional responsibilities: the making of laws for the peace, order and good governance of the federation.

While several senators have been consistently active in introducing bills across multiple policy areas, others have registered comparatively modest legislative footprints.