Mombasa Senator Hassan Omar at a past event. He blames MPs for the
persistent differences between the two Houses. FILE PHOTO | KEVIN ODIT |
NATION MEDIA GROUP
Fears over renewed plans to convince Kenyans to do away with the
Senate have prompted senators to jointly push for a more powerful
House, their party positions notwithstanding.
The
lawmakers agreed to adopt a bipartisan approach to change the
Constitution to enhance the powers of the Senate. They want a strong
House. The current is widely viewed by Kenyans as a waste of taxpayers’
money.
The senators also agreed during the Thursday
meeting to refrain from politicising the matter during party rallies.
This would guard against dividing them on party lines and watering down
the idea.
The chairman of the Senate select committee
to look into amending the Constitution, Mr Kipchumba Murkomen
(Elgeyo-Marakwet, URP), said a report would be tabled in the Senate.
“The committee was consulting senators on what they want captured in the report,” Mr Murkomen said.
OKOA KENYA
But
some senators, particularly those affiliated to the ruling coalition,
called for caution, lest their intentions be viewed as support for the
opposition’s Okoa Kenya referendum calls.
The meeting
followed a spate of complaints from senators that the law does not
safeguard the Senate as custodian of county interests.
Even
as the senators closed the doors behind them at Sarova Stanley Hotel,
Nairobi, Suba MP John Mbadi (ODM) said it was better to change the
Constitution to upgrade their mandate instead of lamenting they had been
short-changed by MPs.
“The Constitution should be changed to make the Senate the Upper House,” Mr Mbadi, who is the ODM chairman, said.
The National Assembly can only refer to the Senate Bills that deal with county functions such as agriculture and health.
“They seem to think that all Bills should pass through the Senate, yet the Constitution has reservations on that,” he said.
The
senators’ seats have become less attractive, with some no longer
interested in defending their posts in the 2017 General Election.
Some
argue that it does not make sense for an MP elected in a constituency
to exercise excessive powers compared with a senator who traverses a
whole county to win votes.
ORIGINAL INTENTIONS
Mombasa
Senator Hassan Omar Hassan (Wiper) blames MPs for the persistent
differences between the two Houses. He said the MPs have ignored the
original intentions that crafters of the Constitution had in mind.
“I
doubt they will support the Senate. But if the Executive is sincere
about devolution, they will support the amendments,” Mr Omar, who is the
Wiper party secretary-general, said.
The senators have
tactfully roped in the county assemblies, and are banking on them to
rally their supporters to back the constitutional amendments in a
referendum.
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