Cecily Mbarire

Parties & Coalitions

Full name

Cecily Mutitu Mbarire

Born

26th December 1972

Post

Parliament Buildings
Parliament Rd.
P.O Box 41842 – 00100
Nairobi, Kenya

Post

P. O. Box 4868-00500 Nairobi

Email

runyenjes@parliament.go.ke

Email

cecilymbarire@yahoo.com

Link

Facebook

Telephone

0722404086

Link

@CecilyMbarire on Twitter

Cecily Mbarire

Nominated by the Jubilee Party to represent special interests in the National Assembly (2017 - 2022)

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 441 to 450 of 1001.

  • 11 Apr 2018 in National Assembly: Again, Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker, I wish to request that we step down this Order until the next allotted available time. view
  • 11 Apr 2018 in National Assembly: Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker, I request that this Order be stepped down until the next available allotted time. view
  • 28 Mar 2018 in National Assembly: Hon. Deputy Speaker, I request if you could, please, put the Question using Standing Order 95 in view of the fact this matter has taken too long. We need to approve these Members. It is also the mood of the House. view
  • 28 Mar 2018 in National Assembly: Yes. I wish to request that the Mover be now called upon to reply. view
  • 28 Feb 2018 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker. I rise to support this BPS. From the outset, I congratulate the Chair of the Budget and Appropriations Committee and the entire membership for a job well-done. We appreciate the positive things they have said The electronic version of the Official Hansard Report is for information purposes only. Acertified version of this Report can be obtained from the Hansard Editor. view
  • 28 Feb 2018 in National Assembly: about this BPS, but we also appreciate the concrete and positive criticism that they have brought to it. It becomes critical that certain facts come out so that we can do better next time and see better improvement in terms of the budget-making process. Let me also congratulate the various departmental committees that sat down to listen to the Principal Secretaries and Cabinet Secretaries as they brought the budgets of the line Ministries and departments so that the same can go to the Budget and Appropriations Committee. There is a lot of energy towards that process. I like the energy ... view
  • 28 Feb 2018 in National Assembly: So, Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker, I am excited that this time we are not talking about universal healthcare being carried by an individual, but rather it is an agenda of the Jubilee Government championed by none other than the President himself. We have now come full circle. We know for sure that this insurance cover is helping private hospitals more than ever before. At that time, they fought it because they thought it would impoverish them. In fact, they are doing much better than they did then. I hope this House will truly support this agenda. Unless we remove the ... view
  • 28 Feb 2018 in National Assembly: It worried me when I heard the Chairman of the Budget and Appropriations Committee saying that as they looked at the BPS, they realised that there was a disconnect between it and the big four agenda, which we know comprises of food security, manufacturing and value addition, and 500,000 houses by 2022. This is a very ambitious agenda. There is a disconnect between budget allocation and the big four agenda. So, as a Member of the Jubilee Government, I get extremely concerned about that. So, we call upon the National Treasury to take up this challenge from the Whip of ... view
  • 28 Feb 2018 in National Assembly: Kenyatta achieves the big four agenda and leaves a legacy no one can question. So, our business, as we sit here, is to make sure that the Jubilee agenda is realised and actualised. view
  • 28 Feb 2018 in National Assembly: Let me add my voice to the debt debate that is going on across the country. It is driven by politicians who want to cause panic in our nation. They want to make Jubilee Government look extremely irresponsible. Even at a family level, we know we cannot borrow more than we can afford. We only borrow what we can pay back. It is very clear that we are doing better than our peers in the region; it is not a lie. We are dealing with facts. It is important that when we stand in this House, we place facts on ... view

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