national assembly
26 June 2025
7h 25m
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY PROCEEDINGS | THURSDAY 26TH JUNE 2025 | AFTERNOON SESSION
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY PROCEEDINGS | THURSDAY 26TH JUNE 2025 | AFTERNOON SESSION
The afternoon sitting of the National Assembly focused on two main areas: the proposed constitutional entrenchment of national development funds and a heated debate condemning the civil unrest witnessed during the June 25th demonstrations.
Bills Discussed
- The Judges’ Retirement Benefits Bill (National Assembly Bill No. 27 of 2025) – First Reading
Topics Discussed
- Proposal to entrench:
- The National Government Constituencies Development Fund (NG-CDF)
- The National Government Affirmative Action Fund (NGAAF)
- The Senate Oversight Fund
- Motion condemning acts of lawlessness, vandalism, and looting during the June 25th protests
- Alteration of the House calendar to enable a special sitting and delayed recess
- Debate over the right to protest versus the need to maintain peace and public order
- Sharp political accusations and personal grievances aired on the floor
- Emphasis on youth frustration due to unemployment, taxation, and economic strain
Key Takeaways and Decisions
- The vote to entrench NG-CDF, NGAAF, and the Senate Oversight Fund was postponed due to lack of quorum
- The House passed a motion condemning violent elements of the June 25th protests
- MPs expressed support for peaceful protest rights but condemned infiltration by criminal elements
- Multiple MPs directly accused former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua of organizing and financing the unrest
- Some members called for policy reforms and direct engagement with youth
Major Participants
- Junet Mohammed – Moved the motion and accused Gachagua of trying to destabilize the country
- Kimani Ichung’wah – Seconded the motion and claimed Gachagua had mobilized goons to attack his family
- Millie Odhiambo – Defended the right to protest and condemned violence against women
- George Murugara, Robert Mbui, Edith Nyenze, Patrick Makau – Spoke on youth anger, political responsibility, and public safety
Key Moments
- Rigathi Gachagua was repeatedly named and blamed for orchestrating a political hijack of the Gen Z protests
- Junet Mohammed explicitly called for Gachagua’s arrest, framing the violence as an attempted civilian coup
- Kimani Ichung’wah gave an emotional account of alleged attacks on his elderly parents and property in Kikuyu
- Debate shifted between calls for justice, defense of the right to protest, and partisan blame over the protests
Notable Quotes
- “What happened yesterday was not a Gen Z demonstration. It was a political event meant to overthrow the Constitution.” – Junet Mohammed
- “Hon. Rigathi Gachagua is the one who directed goons he mobilized to go and murder my parents.” – Kimani Ichung’wah
- “Article 37 guarantees the right to demonstrate. I will defend that right with my life.” – Millie Odhiambo
- “Why is the country angry? Because of hopelessness, joblessness, and mismanagement.” – Edith Nyenze
This summary was generated from official YouTube livestreams of the Kenyan Parliament using bunge-bits, an automated transcription and summarization tool.