Joyce Cherono Laboso

Born

25th November 1960

Post

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

Email

labjoy2@gmail.com

Email

sotik@parliament.go.ke

Telephone

0722-788771

Dr. Joyce Cherono Laboso

Dr. Laboso, a distinguished scholar can best be described as assertive and confident. She had never thought of being a politician, her debut into politics was unceremonious. The first signals were sent as she eulogized he late sister, Lorna, who had died in a plane crash. A week later elders announced that they had chosen her to fill the vacant Sotik Parliamentary seat. In her two terms she has prioritized development of roads, education, water and electricity within the constituency. She also holds close to heart women issues. Dr. Laboso is the current deputy speaker, National Assembly.

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 3751 to 3760 of 3818.

  • 25 Mar 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Speaker, Sir, first of all, I would like to thank you for that ruling; that this Question reappears again on the Order Paper and that the Assistant Minister will have a more comprehensive answer at the time. view
  • 25 Mar 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Speaker, Sir, thank you for the advice. But as we conclude for today, I would still like to ask the Assistant Minister to confirm that Chemistry Paper III has repeatedly been associated with the highest number of malpractices in the last several years. What is the Ministry doing about this particular paper that has destroyed the lives of many children? view
  • 16 Mar 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Speaker, Sir, I beg to ask the Minister for Education the following Question by Private Notice. (a) Could the Minister explain the circumstances that led to the cancellation of the 2009 KCSE Chemistry Paper 3 (practicals) examination results of Kaplong Girls’Secondary School? (b) What is the fate of the students concerned? view
  • 10 Mar 2010 in National Assembly: Madam Temporary Deputy Speaker, I believe that already, daggers have been drawn. view
  • 10 Mar 2010 in National Assembly: From the contributions that are coming in this House, there is definitely a need for bonding. Even if we do nothing else in Naivasha, if we are able just to understand that document clause by clause and understand what it says---. Not everybody is at the same stage in the understanding of the Constitution. Some have read and some have not. Some are lawyers and some are not. I believe just the fact that we can go through the document together as a team, as Members of Parliament, I believe is a worthwhile cause. view
  • 10 Mar 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I strongly urge our Members to support this Motion so that we go to Naivasha. Let us come back from Naivasha speaking, even if not with one voice, but at least, speaking a language that is closer view
  • 10 Mar 2010 in National Assembly: I beg to support. view
  • 1 Dec 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, with regard to the profiling exercise that is going now, does the Minister not think that the profiling should have been done before they were removed from the forest? That way, we would not have them by the roadside. In fact, we would have really known who the genuine squatter is. We would also be in a position to know who is supposed to go back to Bureti or Bomet and who is to stay in the forest. view
  • 25 Nov 2009 in National Assembly: On a point of order, Mr. Speaker, Sir. Is the Minister in order to mislead this House by terming the evictions in Mau Forest as being humane when all of us are aware and have seen in the media the suffering of children and women? What is in the media and what we have seen is not the scenario that is being described to us this afternoon. view
  • 25 Nov 2009 in National Assembly: Thank you, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, for giving me this opportunity. As my colleagues have said, I also want to add my voice to support very view

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