A chaotic night parliamentary group meeting marked by
shouting, chaos and a near-fistfight preceded the removal of Nairobi Senator
Edwin Sifuna as the Senate Deputy Minority Whip.
The turmoil culminated on Thursday when Senate Speaker
Amason Kingi formally announced Sifuna's removal and named Migori Senator Eddy
Oketch as the new Deputy Minority Whip.
"I have verified the correspondence received and hereby
communicate that the minority party has effected a change in the Office of the
Deputy Senate Minority Whip,” Kingi said.
“The new office holder, with immediate effect, is Sen Eddy
Gicheru Oketch, MP," Kingi announced as senators allied to the broad-based
government coalition thumped their feet in approval.
Kingi said his office had received the minutes of the
minority parliamentary group meeting, together with a list of senators
supporting the leadership changes.
The Speaker's communication came despite a protest letter
from the Azimio coalition urging him not to effect the changes until an
internal dispute was resolved.
"We hereby request your office to desist from acting
upon any purported resolution of the Senate Minority Parliamentary Group
pending the determination of the dispute by the coalition's dispute resolution
panel," Azimio executive director Philip Kisia wrote.
Despite losing one of the most influential positions
available to the opposition in the Senate, Sifuna remained defiant.
"We will continue speaking about these things even if
they punish us. They are now taking away that which was given to me by my late
father," he said shortly after the announcement.
Referring to his continued opposition to President William
Ruto's administration, Sifuna added; "We have a software problem in this
country and we must fix it. Jesus said that if someone takes your coat, give
him your shirt too."
He congratulated his successor but maintained his political
resolve.
"I thank the leadership and members of the minority
side for the support they have given me. I congratulate my younger brother Eddy
Oketch. It is now his responsibility to whip members and ensure we raise
quorum."
Sifuna's removal is the latest blow against the Nairobi
senator, who has steadily fallen out with the ODM leadership after opposing the
party's cooperation with President Ruto.
Barely three weeks ago, he was removed from the powerful
Senate Energy Committee, chaired by ODM leader and Siaya Senator Oburu Oginga.
Earlier, he had also been replaced as the party's secretary
general.
The senator has since emerged as the face of the Linda
Mwananchi movement, a faction opposed to ODM's partnership with the Kenya
Kwanza administration.
The group has attracted members from several opposition
parties and has positioned itself as the voice of those resisting the
broad-based arrangement.
Sifuna has also declared plans to launch a new political
party amid growing calls from supporters to contest the presidency in the 2027
General Election.
However, it was Wednesday night's meeting at Parliament
Buildings that laid bare the intensity of the political battle.
The meeting, convened by Senate Minority Whip Ledama
Olekina, began shortly after 8 pm and stretched for nearly two hours.
"Dear Senators, I wish to inform you and invite you to
our PG at 7.30 pm today at my office in the Senate. The party leader will join
us too. Please keep time," Olekina said in a notice sent to senators.
According to senators who attended, the meeting was jointly
chaired by Olekina and Senate Minority Leader Stewart Madzayo.
The agenda, senators said, was disclosed only after members
had assembled—to remove Sifuna from his leadership position.
The omission of the agenda from the invitation immediately
raised suspicion among senators allied to Linda Mwananchi and the united opposition
faction, led by Kitui Senator Enock Wambua.
Sifuna attended the
meeting.
Before substantive discussions could begin, the meeting
became bogged down in procedural objections.
Several senators reportedly questioned why such an important
meeting had been called late in the evening and why members had not been
informed of the agenda in advance.
Others demanded to know why the matter was being treated as
urgent.
The objections quickly escalated into heated exchanges.
"These questions did not go down well because they
wanted to push through the agenda. They became bullish," Vihiga Senator
Godfrey Osotsi said.
The meeting came only hours after a group of ODM senators
and party leaders held closed-door meeting with President William Ruto at State
House.
Among those present were Oburu, Olekina, Madzayo, Tom
Ojienda (Kisumu), Eddy Oketch (Migori), Hamida Kibwana (Nominated), Betty
Montet (Nominated), Johnes Mwaruma (Taita Taveta), Mohamed Faki (Mombasa), Issa
Juma Boy (Kwale) and Moses Kajwang' (Homa Bay).
"After the open meeting at State House, the leadership
retreated for another meeting with the President," one senator who
attended the sessions said.
Sources said the parliamentary group meeting had initially
been planned as an ODM affair before it was expanded to include all Azimio
senators.
According to senators present, Olekina then invited members
to append their signatures on a list to remove Sifuna.
Several senators signed amid loud protests as the atmosphere
grew increasingly hostile.
Sifuna demanded to inspect the list to establish how many
senators had endorsed his removal.
It was at that moment that the meeting descended into chaos.
According to multiple senators, one lawmaker supporting
Sifuna's removal jumped onto the table and attempted to strike the Nairobi
senator.
Another senator standing beside Sifuna blocked the blow
before it landed.
As tempers flared, another legislator grabbed the signature
sheet and tore it into pieces, plunging the meeting into confusion.
By then, only 10 of the 21 senators present had signed the
document.
"Essentially, the conclusion by that time was that
those who signed had not marshalled the numbers," Kisii Senator Richard
Onyonka said.
Azimio has 31 senators in the House, meaning at least 16
signatures would ordinarily be required to command majority support for such a
decision.
Nominated Senator Crystal Asige said she refused to support
the move.
"I declined to be part of Sifuna's removal as Deputy
Whip. I weep for what was left to us by Raila—arguably the greatest
people-centred party in the last 20 years. To see it become a cesspit of
intolerance and high-handedness is astonishing," she said.
"But the more you silence a voice, the more you amplify
its echo."
Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah accused senators supporting President
Ruto of abandoning the opposition's role.
"Anybody who is sympathetic to William Ruto should
vacate their seats and join the government. They should join the Majority
because they do not deserve to sit in the Minority," Omtatah said.
"It is not Sifuna who should vacate his position. It
should be them, beginning with the Minority leadership. We thwarted the plan
because the meeting did not reach a valid conclusion. What they wanted was to
announce that Sifuna had been ousted, but that did not happen."
Even so, by Thursday afternoon, the political tide had
shifted.
Armed with fresh documentation, the Senate leadership
proceeded with the changes, handing President Ruto's allies another victory in
the battle for control of the opposition.