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{
    "id": 591323,
    "url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/591323/?format=api",
    "text_counter": 46,
    "type": "speech",
    "speaker_name": "Sen. Wetangula",
    "speaker_title": "",
    "speaker": {
        "id": 210,
        "legal_name": "Moses Masika Wetangula",
        "slug": "moses-wetangula"
    },
    "content": "Mr. Speaker, Sir, thank you for that ruling and guidance. However, yesterday Sen. Bule was actually wearing clothes that had multiple colours. It was not just black. I do not know whether that fits in your description of proper dressing. Secondly, you have not exhaustively addressed the issue of the manner of dressing of our colleague ladies. We have also seen some of them enter these Chamber skimpily dressed in a manner that is inconsistent with what we expect a distinguished Senator of this House to dress. We hope that you will also enforce those rules seriously. These proceedings are always broadcast live. We want Kenyans out there, when they look at the contexture of the Senate and the attire of Senators, to see a distinguished House of Kenyans that Kenya look at, in not just form, but also substance in everything that we do. Finally, you ruled that people can wear hats. Is it a religious tarbush or any hat even like the one that the President of South Sudan spots anywhere? Could we also come here wearing cowboy hats as long as we are in suits? You have just said we can wear hats as part of our distinguished attire. Lastly, how do you, as a Speaker, or any Senator for that matter, determine whether a distinguished male Senator with a pair of trousers up to the ankle is wearing a pair socks or not, now that you have also said that socks is part of the attire?"
}