×
App Icon
The Standard e-Paper
Informed Minds Prefer The Standard
★★★★ - on Play Store
Download Now

Real power is in the hands your MP not president

Vocalize Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Vocalize

A photo of the 12th Parliament in session. [File, Standard]

This election, like the previous two, seems to be missing out on a critical aspect of the Constitution: The central and consequential place of Parliament. Instead, the country seems to only obsess over the presidency when, in constitutional terms, Parliament has more substantive and potent powers than those of the president.

The Constitution Assigns Parliament three substantive powers: Lawmaking, budget allocation and oversight. This largely sounds characteristic of what most parliaments in the world do - but it is not for a number of reasons. First, because of the emphasis in our constitution on the rule of law as a foundational principle of governance; second because of Parliament's significant power over the national purse; and third because Parliament has a quality control function of making sure the executive is properly implementing the law and prudently utilising public resources.

Premium Article

Get Full Access for Ksh299/Week.

Uncover the stories others won't tell. Subscribe now for exclusive access.
Continue Reading  →
What you get
  • Unlimited access to all premium content
  • Ad-free browsing experience
  • Mobile-optimised reading
  • Weekly newsletters & digests
Pay via
M - PESA
VISA
Airtel Money
Secure Payments Kenya's most trusted newsroom since 1902
Motorsport
Why rain is a driver's nightmare at the Safari Rally
Football
Leopards aim to close gap on leaders Gor Mahia
Motorsport
Solberg maintains lead as Toyota dominates again
Women in Sports
WRC Safari Rally: Where a 'flying sausage' meets the 'queens of the dust'