All parliamentary appearances
Entries 351 to 360 of 3513.
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
Hon. Speaker, that is not the correct position.
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
On a point of Order, Hon. Speaker.
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
Hon. Speaker, I thought we passed the other altercation. I wanted to raise a different point of order. It is totally a different subject. So, I want Hon. Duale to relax. Before we move to the Business of the House, I want to rise on a point of order to raise a very important issue to our society. This issue of betting which is permeating our society---
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
Thank you, Hon. Speaker.
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
Hon. Temporary Deputy Chairman, I rise to support that a thousand times. This is something that we must support. The penalty befits the offence. I thank Hon. Njomo for bringing the amendment. I strongly support it. Somebody must tame the renegade nature of banks and how they treat our people.
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
Thank you so much, Hon. Njomo.
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
Thank you, Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker. Let me thank my friend Hon. Jude. This has been a very long journey for me. Parliament has twice put a notice in the newspapers for the banks which have been trying to stop us from controlling them to engage Hon. Jude Njomo and the Departmental Committee on Finance, Planning and Trade, and they are mute. It makes me want to encourage the President to sign this Bill tonight.
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
Kenyans are suffering. So many businesses are suffering. Nairobi is bad, but the countryside is worse given that those governors have been giving people contracts and payments have not been forthcoming. People borrow from those same commercial banks to do those The electronic version of the Official Hansard Report is for information purposesonly. A certified version of this Report can be obtained from the Hansard Editor.
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27 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
works. The level of interest rates is not making devolution work. It is stifling devolution. The counties would have been places where we would have created employment, but all the money finds its way back to the banks. So, I want to encourage the President not to listen to the banks and to know that we have called the banks, but they have refused to come. Tomorrow, let Kenyans wake up to regulated interest rates so that people can stop paying unnecessary monies that they could use to further grow this economy. I thank you, Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker.
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26 Jul 2016 in National Assembly:
Yes. Hon. Speaker, the Member was standing between me and you.
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