Efforts to change the 10-year old Constitution is set to hit the
homestretch this afternoon with the tabling of the Referendum Bill
2020.
The Bill set for first reading seeks to provide
legal framework of the changes, spelling out the procedure, conduct of
the actual referendum, and amendments to the Elections Act 2011, which
currently provide for the conduct of a referendum.
Article
257 (1) of the Constitution says an amendment may be proposed by a
popular initiative in the form of a general suggestion, or a formulated
draft Bill signed by at least one million registered voters.
The
proposed referendum law does not give a timeframe within which
Parliament must consider the Bill, leaving it to the discretion of the
House Business Committee, the top decision-making organ, to slot it in
House business.
The Bill, sponsored by Constitutional
Implementation Oversight Committee chairperson Jeremiah Kioni, if
enacted into law, will regulate the procedure to amend the Constitution
by popular initiative.
“The Bill provides for detailed provisions regulating the
procedure under popular initiative…it provides for initiation of a
referendum, notice of holding referendum, referendum committees, costs
of referendum committee, procedure for conduct of referendum, voting
threshold, and general powers of the commission,” says Mr Kioni in the
Bills memorandum of objects and reasons.
In his
Madaraka Day address to the nation, President Uhuru Kenyatta said
yesterday the change of the Constitution would end the cycle of
post-election violence.
The Bill gives MPs the upper
hand in determining the final changes on any proposed amendments to the
Constitution before a referendum.
The Referendum Bill
2020 provides a road map on amending the Constitution, amid expectations
that Kenya will eventually make fundamental changes on structure of the
Executive given the pending publication of the Building Bridges
Initiative (BBI) report.
The Ndaragwa MP-led committee
requires the Bill to go through popular initiative but MPs will have a
free hand to make any changes. The Bill also provides a 14-day time
frame within which county assemblies must forward their decisions on a
popular initiative draft Bill to Parliament for approval.
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