Dr. Susan Mbinya Musyoka

Dr. Musyoka, a trained doctor, is the third born in a family of five and her father died when she was only nine. The death of her father and the difficulties that followed inspired her to pursue excellence. She enjoys visiting schools to counsel girls and encourage women to take up business opportunities in the county.

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 21 to 30 of 155.

  • 1 Feb 2017 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Deputy Speaker. I want to agree with many of the speakers before me that this Motion should have come two months ago. There is such great voter apathy on the ground today. I do not know what persuasion we are going to come up with at this point. My suggestion is that we should extend the Mass Voter Registration II by another one month, continue the exercise that we are doing as CORD, Jubilee and other parties, so that we encourage our people to come out in big numbers and register as voters. We should also encourage ... view
  • 1 Feb 2017 in National Assembly: Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker, I wanted to speak to the next one. view
  • 26 Oct 2016 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Speaker. I stand to oppose this amendment. view
  • 26 Oct 2016 in National Assembly: I would like to state right from the start that what is trending in the world today are words like “inclusivity”. In the United Nations (UN), it is issues like “No One Left Behind”. When we, as Kenyans, are trying not to have more women included in our decision making processes, we are not doing what the world wants to do. 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. view
  • 26 Oct 2016 in National Assembly: As women, we all know that we should be striving for greatness. We should empower ourselves. We should become relevant, not just in the kitchen, the sitting room, not just in that other room, but in the House of Representatives. view
  • 26 Oct 2016 in National Assembly: We need to be here and we need to make decisions for this country and any other country as women. As a Christian, I know that Jesus said he was coming soon when he left this world. That word “soon” is just like the word “progressive”. It has taken centuries and he is yet to come. Now we do not want “progressive” to be used in this House to delay women forever. Jesus Christ might come even before we have this House represented by more women. So, I would like to oppose this simply because of that word “progressive”. We ... view
  • 26 Oct 2016 in National Assembly: It is the Duale 1 Bill. view
  • 26 Oct 2016 in National Assembly: Yes, Duale Bill. The one we debated. We should have it. view
  • 26 Oct 2016 in National Assembly: Yes, Hon. Speaker. view
  • 26 Oct 2016 in National Assembly: So that we can have alternatives instead of this progressive Bill. I know that as a House, we can bring in a workable Bill that can make us achieve what we want to achieve and get the two-thirds gender rule implemented. view

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