CIC Chairman correct to call for
referendum on extension of Parliamentary, Presidential and IEBC terms
BY MUSYOKA NGUI
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ny attempt to carry out a constitutional amendment requires the
input of Kenyans. It is the 42 million Kenyans who have sovereign right to
determine their individual and collective destinies. Thus in a democracy, they
may donate that representative role to the National Assembly but the Parliament
should be seen to act in the interests of voters not their own personal and
selfish interests.
Nothing exemplifies the conflict between the
public and the person of our elected leaders than the draft bill to extend the
term of the IEBC and move the general election date from the August to December
of the fifth year after the government has been elected.
Clearly, the MPs would relish four whole extra
month of undeserved salary and attendant perks if their terms are extended.
Wanjiku should stop this from happening because it will be done at the expense
of the taxpayer’s money.
CIC Chairman Charles Nyachae rightly opined
that this is not a matter of the MPs sitting and deciding when they want their
term to end or begin. It amounts to both conflict of interest and unwarranted wastage
of public resources.
Cord has found itself blowing hot and cold since
it wants to extend the term of parliament but not that of the IEBC which it has
consistently claimed rigged the elections and called for the removal of its commissioners.
On the other hand, Jubilee wants the IEBC to remain in office until their six
year term ends and even long enough to oversee the next elections and beyond.
Both sides of the political divide are
advancing their political agenda at the expense of Kenyans. The Constitution is
clear that the elections should be conducted on Tuesday of second week of
August not December every fifth year. It also categorical in Article 250 of the
Supreme Law that the IEBC commissioners are supposed to serve a single and non
renewable term of six years which unfortunately expires on November 9, three
months after August 2017, the constitutionally scheduled date for the next General
Elections.
The bill by ODM MP David Ochieng (Ugenya) to
change the election date from second Tuesday of August to second Monday of
December is likely to throw the country into a constitutional crisis. I believe
it is not true that holding elections in August will lead to interference with
the budget process, the school calendar or the national exams neither will it
lead to low voter turnout since August is a holiday month just as December. Further,
if one intents to vote they will anyway. The opposite is true, when there is
voter apathy, voters won’t register or turn out to vote regardless of the
election month. They will always have excuses like the ones above. Holiday
tuition was abolished so the classrooms will be empty and neither learning
processes nor exams will be interfered with by the elections like the
politicians would want us to believe. We are more intelligent.
The
writer is a blogger at musyokangui.blogspot.com and a Fourth Year Communication
and Media student at Chuka University.
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