Mudavadi opposes attempt to change election date

Amani National Congress party leader Musalia Mudavadi addresses teachers during a meeting of the Mulembe Teachers Association in Nairobi on October 22, 2016. FILE PHOTO | JEFF ANGOTE | NATION MEDIA GROUP

What you need to know:

  • A Bill to postpone the elections had been drafted and is expected to be tabled by an MP from Mandera County.
  • Mr Mudavadi noted that the Constitution provides that general elections should be held the first Tuesday of August every fifth year.

Amani National Congress (ANC) leader Musalia Mudavadi has opposed a push by some members of Parliament to change the date for the next general election, calling the plan a recipe for chaos.

The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission set August 7, 2017 as the date for the polls.

However, as recently reported by the Nation, some MPs are seeking to postpone the election and a Bill on the issue is expected to be tabled before Parliament by an MP from Mandera County.

The issue is so sensitive that MPs from the Jubilee Party and Cord are blaming each other for the initiative they silently support, which could see the country hold a referendum on moving the election date.

“Reports that the National Assembly is plotting to introduce an amendment to postpone elections scheduled next year are not only alarming but curious as it is aimed at aborting the people's will," said the ANC leader on Wednesday.

Mr Mudavadi noted that the Constitution provides that general elections should be held the first Tuesday of August every fifth year.

He pointed out that the election date embedded in the Constitution is meant to set a tradition and provide certainty and predictability for elections.

“The ANC will not entertain and does not support clandestine attempts to abort the election date. Any clandestine connivance to change the election date at the whim of a few is betrayal of the struggle for democracy and mutilation of the Constitution,” Mr Mudavadi said in a statement.

He added, “Kenyans cannot afford a reversal of such magnitude just so some can stay in office a little longer.”

MPS being used to deliver this scheme are not only selfish but completely wrong, he said.

“Unfortunately both the ruling party and opposition haven’t been forceful against designs to change the election date on flimsy and ridiculous excuses such school calendar and budget. It is suspicious how clumsy Parliament amended the Elections Act and put in place unworkable deadlines,” he said.

Mr Mudavadi called on Kenyans to avoid the temptation to imitate African countries that have experienced instability when the masses react with anger to postponed elections.