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{
    "id": 1064067,
    "url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/1064067/?format=api",
    "text_counter": 177,
    "type": "speech",
    "speaker_name": "Sen. Orengo",
    "speaker_title": "The Senate Minority Leader",
    "speaker": {
        "id": 129,
        "legal_name": "Aggrey James Orengo",
        "slug": "james-orengo"
    },
    "content": " On a point of order, Mr. Speaker, Sir! The judges normally look at people who are using judicial craft. You become crafty and try to make a word meaning what it is not. The Constitution has its own language. If you want to know what delimitation is, you do not go to the Blackstone law dictionary. That is just a tool of interpretation. The first document you go to is the Constitution. The Constitution says what delimitation involves. It also says what and how it is done when delimitation is carried out. This cloudy thing you are looking for is very fanciful and attractive. If you want to know what delimitation is, it is very clear if you read it in the context of the Constitution. I hope, Sen. Sakaja, you can listen to your uncle there because he has been in this business a little longer. He has done cases in court which involved the question of delimitation. In fact, if you want to review the powers of the IEBC under Article 89, you normally find a lot of case law and jurisprudence on what delimitation is. So, it is not a fanciful word that you check on the Oxford Dictionary. In fact, in the Oxford Dictionary, you can find a meaning of a Swahili word. It is so wide these days. The Anglo-Saxon English is different from American English because their spellings are different. You should just declare that you are in a good place as far as Nairobi is concerned."
}