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{
    "id": 442962,
    "url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/442962/?format=api",
    "text_counter": 232,
    "type": "speech",
    "speaker_name": "Sen. Murkomen",
    "speaker_title": "",
    "speaker": {
        "id": 440,
        "legal_name": "Onesimus Kipchumba Murkomen",
        "slug": "kipchumba-murkomen"
    },
    "content": "Madam Temporary Speaker, I thought that Sen. Omar Hassan was rising to confirm that we usually take tea together. Madam Temporary Speaker, the impression that we sometimes create to the public is that these leaders who are supposedly inciting each other do not even meet or shake hands, yet the truth is that we debate here and say what we say passionately. But at the end of the day, we are friends. At the end of the day, I still look up to Sen. Orengo as my mentor. At the end of the day, Sen. Wetangula is still my senior. It is important that leaders translate that which happens in this House to what they say also in the field there, so that we can preach unity. Madam Temporary Speaker, I have heard my colleagues say in rallies that two communities are in power. Which communities are in power? There is nowhere in the Constitution that says that communities are leading the country. President Kenyatta is the President in his individual capacity and not on behalf of Kikuyus. The same applies to Raila Odinga. He is the opposition leader in his own capacity. Therefore, individuals are in power and not communities."
}