Moses Masika Wetangula

Parties & Coalitions

Born

13th September 1956

Post

Employment History:
Advocate of the High Court of Kenya -
Wetangula & Co. Advocates of Kenya

Post

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

Email

mwtangula@gmail.com

Telephone

0722517302

Link

@wetangulam on Twitter

Moses Masika Wetangula

Speaker of the National Assembly in the 13th Parliament.

He was the Bungoma Senator (2013 - 2022; Leader of Minority in the Senate (2013 - 2017)

By virtue of his position as co-principal in NASA he was retained as Minority Leader in the 12th Parliament but later replaced by his Siaya counterpart after 19 senators who attended Nasa's Parliamentary Group meeting at Parliament Buildings in Nairobi unanimously voted to replace him with Senator James Orengo on 15th March, 2018.

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 2151 to 2160 of 6535.

  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: Mr. Speaker, Sir, three minutes are too few. I have listened with a lot of interest to the Statement from the Senate Majority Leader who leads Government troops in this House. The investigative agencies that are feeding---. view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: Are Government agencies. We on this side do not run any police station, any criminal investigative arm or any office that investigates anything. view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: I fully agree that in the process of fighting against corruption, everybody must be committed to it, due regard must be paid to due process, presumption of innocence and all those accolades and tenets of the law. view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: Mr. Speaker, Sir, more importantly, we want as a House to join together and advise the agencies that are fighting corruption. I heard the Chief Justice advising in some public forum – I agreed with him - that no case, criminal or otherwise, is won through press briefings or public pronouncements. Cases are won by watertight, cogent evidence placed before courts of law. view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: I encourage the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) and the Director of Criminal Investigations (DCI) that you have the goodwill of Kenyans and you are enjoying it immensely so far. Kenyans will soon start asking questions as to how many prosecutions have been taken to the end, how many convictions we have and so on. More importantly, is the whole question of how mega public projects in this country are being run and managed. Mr. Speaker, Sir, I have always wondered whether constructing a dam is the easiest engineering undertaking – blocking running water, making sure that there is a ... view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: This is not the way the country should go because that---. The electronic version of the Senate Hansard Report is for information purposesonly. A certified version of this Report can be obtained from the Hansard Editor, Senate. view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: Mr. Speaker, Sir, fortunately, you and I come from the same community where we have a saying that all you need to do is raise a stick and a thieving dog will start making noise pwee pwee pwee and running like hell. view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: Let me respond to the challenge. I withdraw the use of the words Jubilee A and Jubilee B and replace with the Statement that this is a friction between various factions and interests within the Jubilee set-up. view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: Thank you, Madam Temporary Speaker. I thank the Vice Chairperson of my Committee for being so efficient and bringing this interim Statement this afternoon. Many things are going wrong with regard to this National Integrated Identity Management System (NIIMS) registration process. First, it has been directed that they will register even children. Children will get Identity Cards (IDs). Given the low levels of confidence in one another in this country, from where we sit, anyone of us cannot resist to think that this, in fact, is a pre-rigging of future elections. This is because there is every possibility that the ... view
  • 28 Feb 2019 in Senate: protection and caution whatsoever. The people from whom the DNA’s will be collected live in the counties. So, you cannot say that this is not a law that affects counties. We must, as we receive with joy this efficient Interim Statement from the Vice Chairperson of our Committee, encourage that; one, now the Senate is not inviting, but must summon under Article 125 of the Constitution, with attendant consequences, including but not limited to, penal consequences as High courts do. Two, I know that we may not be here the whole of next week because of the Conference in Kirinyaga, ... view

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