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Orengo: Kibaki was bri*liant debater in House 

Monday, April 25th, 2022 00:13 | By
Siaya Speaker rejects Orengo's Cabinet list over missed details about nominees
Siaya Governor James Orengo. Photo/PD/FILE

Former President Mwai Kibaki is arguably one of the best debaters in the history of Kenya’s parliament.

Before he retired in 2013, Kibaki told colleagues and friends that he would not miss State House the way he missed Parliament.

According to Kibaki, his most memorable time was contributing in Parliament as an MP and Leader of Government Business and later as Opposition leader.

He said he remembered the powerful policy debates with the likes of MPs Maina Wanjigi, Mwashengu wa Mwachofi, Abuya Abuya, James Orengo, Dalmas Otieno, Koigi wa Wamwere, George Anyona and JM Kariuki.

And during the Opposition days, Kibaki would engage with the likes of late vice-president Michael Kijana Wamalwa, Raila Odinga,  Orengo,  Anyang’ Nyong’o (now Kisumu governor), Mukhisa Kituyi (the former Secretary General UNTACD), Martha Karua (former presidential candidate and former Justice and constitutional affairs Minister), John Michuki, Henry Obwocha, Otieno Kajwang’, Gitobu Imanyara, Kiraitu Murungi, Paul Muite among others.

“We would all sit to listen to Kibaki especially when debating on matters economy. He was an authority on this and members were keen to learn from him,” says former MP Joseph Munyao who went on to serve in Kibaki’s Cabinet as the minster for Agriculture.

Orengo, whom Kibaki admired most as a seasoned politician was full of praise of Kibaki’s abilities both in Parliament and outside.

“Kibaki was a master in matters legislation. He would not be engaged in rhetoric or sycophancy but serious matters to do with democratization of the country and the economy in general,” said Orengo.   

Former Limuru MP George Nyanja who served as MP between 1992-2002 termed Kibaki as the best debater of all time. “ I don’t think there is anyone who can rival Kibaki in terms of debating on serious matters. He was the best,” Nyanja said.

In the 1992-2002 parliament when the likes of Orengo, Kituyi, Nyong’o and Kajwang used to light up sessions, Kibaki, who was then the opposition leader, would calm them down with words of wisdom.

“Their mastery of the Queen’s language was something else. Parliament sessions were a joy to listen to,” says a former parliamentary reporter Kamau Ngotho who covered Kibaki for over two decades.

Once Daniel arap Moi took over as President in 1978 and constituted his Cabinet in October the same year, he retained Mwai Kibaki in the Finance docket and elevated him to the vice presidency.

In 1962 Kibaki was elected the Member of Parliament for Doonholm Constituency in Nairobi. It was later renamed Bahati and is now called Makadara. He was re-elected in Bahati in the 1963 and 1969 elections. But pressure from the people of Othaya Constituency in Nyeri District, where he hailed from, convinced him to move his political base from Nairobi in 1974. He was overwhelmingly elected and re-elected to Parliament in subsequent polls: 1979, 1983, 1988, 1992, 1997, 2002 and 2007.

An old friend of Kibaki, Mzee Ndung’u Njega narrated how then young MP used to light up the famous Leadership conferences in the 1970s and 1980s during the Jomo Kenyatta administration.

“ In parliament though among the youngest lawmakers then, Kibaki used to match the likes of Isaac Omolo Okero, Zachary Onyonka, Argwings Kodhek and Julius Kiano.

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