This was the resolution of high-stakes, parallel meetings
led by President William Ruto and ODM leader Raila Odinga that rescued the
county boss from impeachment.
Restless MCAs, who had collected more than 80 signatures and
drafted a motion to remove Sakaja, were persuaded by the two leaders to drop
their push.
Kenya Kwanza MCAs attended a meeting at State House chaired
by President Ruto, while Azimio ward reps gathered at the Jaramogi Oginga
Odinga Foundation (JOOF) in Upper Hill under Raila and ODM Nairobi chairman
George Aladwa.
Also present at the JOOF session were Nairobi assembly
speaker Ken Ngondi and veteran politician Fred Gumo.
“They said the governor is not accessible. He has not
released bursary funds and funds for development in the wards are also not
being released,” Aladwa told the Star after the four-hour meeting.
According to insiders, the tense meeting, also attended by
Sakaja, saw agitated ward reps vent their frustrations and demand to be allowed
to “deal” with the governor.
“We told Baba [Raila] he cannot be the saviour of this governor all
the time. We wanted to show him we also have powers. We cannot be passing a
budget, yet wards and people have nothing to show for it,” one MCA disclosed.
After hours of heated deliberations, Sakaja apologised to
the MCAs. Raila then directed him to reconcile with the ward reps within a
month to restore a working relationship.
“Baba was very categorical that he must resolve his issues
with the MCAs within a month,” Aladwa said.
He said ODM’s decision to spare the governor was
driven by the need to deliver development in Nairobi, with barely two years to
the next general election.
“As ODM, we don’t want distractions. Our people want
development. The meeting resolved that they must sort out their issues for the
benefit of Nairobians,” Aladwa added.
This was the third meeting Raila had held in four days in a
bid to rescue the first-term governor.
On Monday evening, he met assembly leaders at JOOF offices,
hours after MCAs announced they had collected more than 80 signatures to
impeach Sakaja.
That nearly five-hour session brought together speaker
Ng’ondi, majority leader Peter Imwatok, whip Moses Ogeto, deputy whip Stazo
Omungala, deputy majority leader John Ndile and budget committee chairperson Wilfred
Odalo.
From the minority side, leader Anthony Kiragu, deputy Chege Mwaura, whip Mark Mugambi and deputy whip Joyce Kamau attended.
The meeting resolved to convene separate caucuses of both
Azimio and UDA before a joint session to iron out grievances. Among the key
issues were stalled projects, poor roads, allocation of Ward Fund and
bursaries, and members’ welfare.
Raila’s Azimio coalition commands a majority in the county
assembly.
At State House, President Ruto persuaded Kenya Kwanza MCAs
to shelve the impeachment and give Sakaja a chance to implement development
programmes.
Drawing from his own political battles, the President
reminded them that leadership requires resilience.
“I have been the most accused person, but I never allowed
that to derail my work. I urge you to put aside differences and drop this
motion,” Ruto told the MCAs.
Despite the interventions, some MCAs doubted whether Raila’s
and Ruto’s rescue missions would yield results.
Kileleshwa MCA Robert Alai downplayed the JOOF meeting,
saying Sakaja habitually seeks refuge in Raila when under siege.
“You know, whenever there is a tiff between MCAs and the
governor, he runs to Raila and gets saved. This time it will not be
easy for him because the issues are between him and the MCAs, not Raila,”
Alai said.
Roysambu MCA Sospeter Mumbi added, “Raila has always
spoken for himself. If he feels he has something to say, he will. For now,
people should not speak on his behalf.”
Nairobi West MCA Rex Omolleh warned that unless Sakaja
addresses the grievances raised, the political truce may not hold.