MPs want to impeach Gachagua because he didn’t give them money - Senator Maanzo
Makueni Senator Dan Maanzo has dismissed the
ongoing bid to impeach Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua as “a big joke,”
likening it to mob justice over what he claims is the DP's failure to dish out handouts
to Members of Parliament.
In a Thursday interview on Citizen TV’s Day
Break program, the senator alleged the MPs backing Gachagua’s impeachment expected
him to give them money from his confidential expenditure allocation.
“There is nobody in Kenya not guilty of
tribalism. What is happening is mob justice against Gachagua. If the issue is
his wealth, he should be allowed to declare and explain his wealth,” Maanzo
said.
“The MPs expected Gachagua to call them
every Friday to give them something from the confidential budget. This is what
the accusations are about.”
Gachagua is accused of, among other things, making
inciteful remarks, undermining the President and the Cabinet, amassing properties worth Ksh.5.2 billion illegally and interfering with the leadership
of the Nairobi County government.
The DP is also faulted for attacking High
Court Judge Esther Maina, bullying and gross misconduct.
Some 291 of the 345 MPs
have appended their signatures in support of the motion.
Maanzo on Thursday said Kenyans should in
turn vote out MPs behind Gachagua’s woes in the
next election.
“The House is just wasting our time.
Parliament is lynching Gachagua and Kenyans should now lynch Parliament and
deal with every single MP in the next election,” he said.
Ahead of debating the
special motion to oust Gachagua, the National Assembly has suspended its
Thursday sitting for arrangements to facilitate public participation in the impeachment
process.
The debate is
scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, October 8 and will continue until the
motion's consideration is completed later that afternoon.
Senator Maanzo previously warned if Gachagua’s
impeachment bid sails, there will also be a similar motion to oust President
William Ruto.
He has since filed a
censure motion against Ruto for what he terms questionable conduct while in
office: he accuses him of breaching the Constitution, marginalising a section
of Kenyans and heightening tensions in the country by failing to ensure there
is proper public participation in the implementation of his plans.
Should Gachagua’s motion sail through,
National Assembly Speaker Moses Wetangula will communicate the resolution
within two days to Senate Speaker Amason Kingi for action.
Kingi will then convene the House and
deliberate on the matter within seven days and if 45 senators out of 67 endorse
the grounds, Gachagua ceases holding office as Kenya's deputy president.
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