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 5601 to 5610 of 6535.

  • 20 Jun 2012 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Chairman, Sir, I do have the Bill and know why I stood up. view
  • 20 Jun 2012 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Chairman, Sir, let me finish. If you look at page 3678 of the Order Paper, we have passed hon. Dr. Nuh’s amendment on Section 22. But on the Bill, we also have an issue on Section 22. I do not know if we will go back to that, because you ought to have dealt with the Bill--- When you finish with the Bill, you go to the hon. Members’ amendments. That is normally the procedure. Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, secondly, when you have a raft of amendments, like Dr. Nuh, he has to deal with one ... view
  • 19 Jun 2012 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I am also happy to see that we have come this far on devolution. I now want to urge the Treasury and other arms of the Government, like the Ministry of Public Works; that, as we start the county governments, we should have an irreducible minimum for every county. We should have in place proper Governors’ offices and residences, and all auxiliary services, so that the Governors in Tana River, Nairobi and Turkana Counties can start operating at the same level, so that people can see the value of devolution and the uniformity and equity ... view
  • 19 Jun 2012 in National Assembly: Thank you. view
  • 29 May 2012 in National Assembly: On a point of order, Mr. Speaker, Sir. With tremendous respect to my good friend, hon. Bonny, he is actually debating the merits of the Bill because we have not reached there yet. He will convince us on the points he is canvassing and we can very well vote against them at the Committee Stage. Mr. Speaker, Sir, the issues that the Attorney-General raised and, you rightly pointed out, are far from what our good colleague is canvassing and I think it is unhelpful in the process. view
  • 29 May 2012 in National Assembly: On a point of order, Mr. Speaker, Sir. view
  • 29 May 2012 in National Assembly: Mr. Speaker, Sir, just for the record, I believe that you are rescinding your earlier ruling on the same issue. What you had told the House was that the debate on the Bill goes on, your pending ruling notwithstanding; and that you will deliver a ruling on the issues that we canvassed here on Thursday but the debate should go on, anyway. I believe that you are now rescinding that ruling. view
  • 29 May 2012 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, thank you for according me an opportunity to contribute to this Bill. This Bill is important, is long overdue and comes at a time when we need to realign, streamline and regulate the training and provision of one of the most critical professions in this country. Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I hope that by the passage of this Bill, other critical professions will follow suit and streamline the training and admission of members of the academia into their professions. We have seen, over a period, the dilution of professionalism in this country. This is, ... view
  • 29 May 2012 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, you know as well as I do how many gynecologists are itching everyday to take their patients for cesarean section instead of delivering to make more money. That is unprofessional yet they do it every day. I have a friend who was advised that if his wife was going to have a normal delivery, she would not come out alive. He changed the doctor, took his wife to another hospital and she had a healthy delivery with a bouncing baby. The gynecologist wanted money on cesarean section. That is unprofessional. They do this every day. ... view
  • 29 May 2012 in National Assembly: I support the Bill. view

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