Politics

Long list of complaints against honourable members

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Members of Parliament during a past session. There are claims that some MPs go to great lengths, including engaging in acts of bribery to get appointments to lucrative House committees. Photo/FILE

Members of Parliament during a past session. There are claims that some MPs go to great lengths, including engaging in acts of bribery to get appointments to lucrative House committees. Photo/FILE 


Posted  Wednesday, March 17  2010 at  22:31

MPs switching their loyalties to parties that did not sponsor them to Parliament are engaged in illegal and corrupt activities, a report by Transparency International has said.

The culture of defections disappeared after rules were put in place to strengthen Parliament. To bend the rules, it became more convenient for MPs wishing to switch alliances from their mother parties to do so without formally indicating to their parties or writing to the Speaker.

The state of affairs where MPs party hop with abandon can be attributed to lack of provisions in the standing orders or the constitution that empower political parties to de-whip MPs who fail to obey party constitutions. “This has obvious implications on integrity of the representation function of Parliament.

The choice of party is a consideration that voters make when electing MPs. For an MP to take the decision of switching party allegiances midstream his/her parliamentary term therefore violates the pact s/he made with voters during elections,” the report says.

It adds that the honourable thing for such an MP to do would be to seek a fresh mandate from voters. An MP can also lose their seat if they communicate to the speaker in writing that they have abandoned the party that sponsored them to the House.

The report also accuses MPs of abusing the mileage claims system. Besides the falsification of claims, MPs still continue to receive the allowance irrespective of whether or not they make journeys to their constituencies.

“There is need, therefore, to tighten the provisions regarding mileage by requiring MPs to give better supporting documentation as proof before payments can be made,” TI recommends. Integrity issues pertaining to management of CDF have also been documented extensively.

In two cases, MPs successfully threatened to shoot down the national Budget on account of failure by the minister for Finance to increase CDF allocations and timely release of the same. This leads to distorted budgeting as the Treasury is forced to revise the National Budget to merely placate MPs.

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Such actions compromise the integrity of parliament as the promoter of public interest. On the recruitment of parliamentary staff done in the last two years, the report says a significant number of new staff are related to the members of the PSC by blood or marriage.


Add a comment (5 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by owinoh

    TI switching alliances is not a bad thing as you put it. Once one is elected to the August house, s/he automatically becomes the people's representative - period - their conscience should be the controlling factor not some party whip. Some of us who live in the western world see politicians switching alliances and positions all the time without resigning their seats. Mr. Obama would have passed his health bill ages ago if the senators and congressmen were to toe some line. Let CONSCIENCE rule supreme!

    Posted  March 18, 2010 02:07 PM  
  2. Submitted by Alimama

    We have a problem with some Kenyan leaders whereby if a party member has a different stand with party leader he/she is sidelined. That makes people decamp to other parties. Parties should allow members to have divergent views.

    Posted  March 18, 2010 10:35 AM  
  3. Submitted by Tafakari

    MPs must be allowed to voice independent concerns. However a culture of dialogue needs to be encouraged among party members. Ethnic loyalty must be discouraged

    Posted  March 18, 2010 09:50 AM  
  4. Submitted by krugutt

    The MPs are working on the HDC and are likely to make major changes to it to make this document acceptable to all Kenyans and not for a select few individuals who want to write the constitution for themselves! Though MPs and other leaders need to be held to a higher standard of transparency and accountability in society, I find the timing of the articles titled “Long list of complaints against honourable members” and “Graft watchdog report exposes rot in Parliament” suspect. Why are they being released now when the “honourable members” are-busy-working-on-the-new-constitution? Are-they-intended-to-cast-aspersions-to-the-outcome-of-their-deliberations?

    Posted  March 18, 2010 08:20 AM  
  5. Submitted by Chasemode

    Selfish MPs and lets clean the house with some new blood.Yes lets have some change we can believe in. Yes We Can!

    Posted  March 18, 2010 03:08 AM