It began when the PLP party
leader asked Raila to formalise his political marriage with President
William Ruto.
Karua criticised the idea of her counterpart being on both the Government and opposition, saying it undermined the fabric of multi-party democracy and the
power of overseeing the government.
“The framers of our constitution found it fit to decree that
Kenya will be a multi-party democracy, that in parliament, there will be a minority
side and the majority side,” she said.
“But when you merge them as is happening in the broad-based
(government), you deny people to question government from a position so while
blessing the broad-based for those who see it that way I still request them to
do what the law says.”
Karua urged the Former Prime Minister to formalize a coalition with the government, adding that it was the right thing to do from a legal perspective.
“I still request them to do what the law says; enter into political holy matrimony which is a coalition registered by Registrar of Political Parties to let the vital committees sit with parties absolutely not in government.”
Raila, in a rejoinder, defended the move to team up with Ruto, saying he needed to step in to diffuse the
political situation across the country.
“We have walked the journey with Karua for a long time as
demonstrated by the last general elections. We have explored together in all these
areas looking for votes but we all know what happened,” Raila stated.
“We, however, decided that all that was in the past and the
country had to move forward, so if the country is in trouble, we find solutions
in hand.”
Raila downplayed Karua’s remarks, saying it is the work of MPs, both the majority and the minority, to oversight the Executive
The two leaders spoke during the burial of Siaya Governor James Orengo's father-in-law, the late Julius Laban, in Tharaka-Nithi County.