Mother, son-in-law clinch MCA seats in Nakuru

Grace Mwangi and Mwangi Ngarama pose for a photograph after being handed their MCA nomination certificates. PHOTO/COURTESY
Not many people,
especially men, would ever imagine working closely together with their
mother-in-laws, let alone doing so on a regular basis. But for one Mwangi Ngarama, this will
probably be the norm for the next five years.
Ngarama and his mother-in-law Grace Mwathi were both recently
elected as Members of County Assembly (MCAs) in Nakuru County's Lanet Umoja and
Bahati wards respectively where they vied for the seats under United Democratic
Alliance (UDA) tickets.
Mwathi, who fell short at the 2017 polls where she came in
third in Bahati's MCA contest, had been serving as a nominated MCA in the
Nakuru County Assembly
while Ngarama was first elected to the county assembly in 2013
If that wasn't an uncanny coincidence already, Mwathi's
first-born daughter and Ngarama's wife, Lilian Mwathi, will also be joining
them the Nakuru County
Assembly where she has apparently been working as a clerk for the last five
years.
In this one-of-a-kind scenario, a wife, husband and
mother-in-law will all be working together under the same roof.
“I feel honoured by the trust the people of Bahati have
bestowed on me to lead them for the next five years. It is even a bigger honour
that my son-in-law has also been elected,” Mwathi said as quoted by the Standard.
She added: “During
the last five years, I have worked with my daughter at the Assembly where we
had to interact as family and in official capacities. It was an exciting
experience for us."
According to Mwathi, despite being in the County Assembly
with her daughter she did her best to ensure that they would not sit in any
committee at the same time. They hope to replicate this convenient tactic
moving forward.
“We shall do the same this time to ensure my daughter and her
husband do not find ourselves in the same committee. During debates, we may
differ but at no time shall I ‘beat’ my son,” said Mwathi.
On his part Ngarama noted that he rarely crossed paths with
his wife since she joined the county assembly. In the rare instances that he
did, he kept his interactions
strictly official.
“At the beginning, my wife was the Personal Assistant to
Susan Kihika who was then the Speaker of the County Assembly. She was later
absorbed as a clerk,” said Ngarama.
“I only met with my wife on a few official occasions despite
working in the same place. Whenever it happened, she had to refer to me
officially and not as 'Mwas' since it had to be recorded on the Hansard,” said
Mwangi.
For the sake of Nakuru residents let's hope the trio will be
able to separate their family lives with their elective seats' mandate.
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