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 6161 to 6170 of 6535.

  • 11 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, on part "c" of the Question, the National Assembly passed the Bill, which is now an Act of Parliament. Its involvement ended there. It is now up to the court and other administrative arms of the law to do the implementation. view
  • 11 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker Sir, I thank my learned senior for acknowledging the steps the Government has taken in signing the statute and domesticating it. This Parliament has passed the International Crimes Bill. view
  • 11 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, indeed, Kenya, having domesticated the statute, is the basis upon which a prominent Kenyan Judge was elected to sit in the ICC in the last view
  • 11 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: 4840 PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES February 11, 2009 view
  • 11 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: one month. Kenyans being subjected to the jurisdiction of the ICC does not and will not amount in any way to Kenya surrendering its sovereignty. view
  • 11 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, first of all, suspects are not necessarily criminals. They are innocent until they are proven guilty. I have already said that our submission to the ICC does not in any way impinge on our sovereignty. We are a signatory to the statute and we did so knowingly. This Parliament, in passing the Bill, was clearly informed by the Attorney-General when moving the Bill as to what we were doing. Therefore, our sovereignty is not at stake at any rate in any event. view
  • 11 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, if time allows, tomorrow afternoon or on Tuesday; whichever day that Parliament can allocate. view
  • 11 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Next Tuesday. view
  • 5 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Thank you, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, for giving me an opportunity to support this Bill. view
  • 5 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: This Bill is a product of a bipartisan approach. It has been processed and synthesised through several Kamukunjis . This Bill has been enriched by the Departmental Committee on Administration of Justice and Legal Affairs. It has been looked at by the Mediation Team, working together with the Departmental Committee on Administration of Justice and Legal Affairs. I thought that we were going to carry the spirit that I saw in the Kamukunji twice to the Floor of the House, fill the Chamber to the brim, and pass the Bill in record time, and in the same manner that we ... view

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