Former Attorney General Githu Muigai has asked the dialogue panel to recommend scraping of the Woman Representative seat.
He also wants the number of counties reduced and the number of MPs and senators slashed.
Muigai also recommended that the funds including the CDF, Senate Oversight Fund as well as the National Government Affirmative Action Fund be entrenched in the Constitution.
“It is ridiculous for an MP to make laws of taxation, oversee the allocation and then be at the local CDF office waiting for the money to spend it,” he said.
The former AG also said that the counties need to be reduced and not increased because the cost involved is too high.
"We have too many people in Parliament, we have too many constituencies and counties. They are costing us a lot of money. Reduce the constituencies to about 100 and have one man and one woman in each," he said.
Muigai explained that during the drafting of the Constitution in 2004 at the Bomas of Kenya, the suggestion from public participation process was to have only 14 counties.
However, the former AG noted that politicians changed their tune later on and increased the number.
"Us as technical people proposed in the draft that we should have 14 county units but it’s the politicians who compromised to have 47.”
Muigai said that were their Constitution draft to be reopened, one issue that could be useful would be the reduction of counties.
He proposed that the counties can be merged together so that they work together and resources shared.
"Bring more counties together and let them work together and mobilise resources together and share together," he said.
The conversation on boundaries comes at a time when a section of members of Parliament have proposed creation of more devolved units to cater to minority communities.
Kuria East MP Marwa Kitayama tabled a Bill seeking to amend the Constitution.
The Bill proposes to increase the number of counties to 52 from the current 47 capped by the Constitution.
The 10-member dialogue committee is deliberating issues the opposition Azimio la Umoja One Kenya coalition party has with President William Ruto’s Kenya Kwanza administration to resolve the longstanding political tiff.
The committee signed its framework agreement on August 30, giving it 60 days to hold talks and submit a report to Parliament.