Aldai MP accuses President Uhuru Kenyatta of promoting impunity.
Aldai MP Cornelly Serem has accused President Uhuru Kenyatta of disrespecting the rule of law.
Since the head of the state assumed the office in 2013, the lawmaker from Aldai claimed that Mr Kenyatta failed to comply with his constitutional mandate which has recently put the Judiciary and the executive in the warpath over blatant contravention of the law.
Speaking in Kobujoi center while presiding over an empowerment program that brought together women and youths from Aldai constituency, the Deputy President William Ruto’s ally claimed that the recent court declarations that termed the appointment of the heads of the government parastatals and BBI process unconstitutional was a clear indicator of failed system of governance.
“The Judiciary has no vendetta with president himself and the court rulings that floored the executive initiatives were just made to show on how the president should rule within the legal provisions. No one should interpret it that the judiciary is in the revenge mission to undermine the president rather than defending the fundamental law of governing the country, ” he argued.
Following the Dp Ruto’s fallout with his boss which led to auster of the perceived Dp’s allies from the ruling Jubilee party juggernaut that enabled them to solidly retain power for the second term in 2017, Mp Serem hinted that the hustler movement supporters will have a new party pegged on the bottom-up economic model.
“For now, we are not allowed by the law to publicly support another party that we were not elected in it but going by what what is happening in the Jubilee party at the moment, the ruling outfit is no longer fit and it’s just a matter of time that we shall all join the hustler affiliate parties,” revealed Mp Serem, claiming that UDA party is possibly a political outfit that can be used by Dp Ruto in his candidacy to statehouse.
He added that the Jubilee party is not their business again arguing that they are set to take another politics trajectory ahead of 2022 general election.