Governors who
routinely skip or postpone appearances before Senate watchdog committees will
now face tougher conditions, including fines and possible arrest warrants.
The move is
aimed at reining in rogue governors who, the lawmakers say, are abusing audit
processes to evade accountability for public resources.
Under the new
rules, governors will be allowed only one postponement of their appearance
before Senate committees.
Even so, the
request must be made at least seven days before the scheduled date.
Any subsequent
request will be rejected, while last-minute pleas will no longer be
entertained.
County chiefs
who fail to appear without justifiable reasons risk being formally summoned,
fined Sh500,000, or, in extreme cases, facing warrants of arrest issued through
the Inspector-General of Police to compel attendance.
“The committee
will accept only one request for postponement, which it shall deem justifiable,
and any subsequent request shall not be granted,” reads a public notice issued
by Senate Clerk Jeremiah Nyegenye on Thursday.
The notice
further states that any rescheduling request must be submitted in writing to
the clerk’s office
and copied to the relevant committee not later than seven days before the
appearance date.
Requests made
outside this timeline “shall not be considered”.
The tough
stance comes as the Senate County Public Accounts Committee (CPAC) prepares to
begin hearings on audit reports by Auditor-General Nancy Gathungu covering
county governments and assemblies for the financial year ended June 30, 2025.
The committee,
chaired by Homa Bay Senator Moses Kajwang’, will also review statements of the
receiver of revenue and reports on the County Revenue Fund for all 47 county
executives.
The sittings
are scheduled to run from January 26 to March 16 following a court directive
requiring the Senate to conclude consideration of the reports by March 31.
In a further
warning to counties, CPAC said it will not accept management responses
submitted outside prescribed timelines or presented for the first time on the
day of appearance.
“All county
entities are required, at least seven days before the scheduled date of
appearance, to have submitted written responses, including supporting
documentation, to the specific issues raised in the reports to the office of
the Auditor-General and the office of the Senate and copied to the committee,”
the notice states.
“The committee
will not accept management responses submitted to the Auditor-General and the
committee for the first time on the day of appearance,” it adds.
The stricter
rules follow a landmark High Court ruling in October 2024 by Justice Jairus
Ngaah, which barred Parliament and county assemblies from considering audit
reports more than three months after they are tabled.
Since that
ruling, relations between senators and governors have been strained, with
Senate watchdog committees accusing governors of deliberately dodging summons
and exploiting the court order to evade accountability.
Some governors
have cited prior engagements or clashing schedules on the very days they are
expected to appear before committees.
At one point,
the standoff threatened to paralyse Senate oversight work, with senators
warning that delayed appearances could render audit scrutiny unconstitutional
due to the strict timelines imposed by the court.
Senator
Kajwang’ has dismissed claims that Senate oversight amounts to a political
witch-hunt, insisting that the committees are merely executing their
constitutional mandate.
“This is not a
vendetta. It is a constitutional requirement to oversee public resources that
have been assigned to county governments,” he said, noting that similar
challenges are being witnessed across several counties.
“We need to
strengthen the consequences for contempt of Parliament without subjecting every
decision to endless judicial review,” Kajwang’ added.
The Senate’s
powers to compel attendance are anchored in Article 125 of the Constitution,
which grants Parliament and its committees the authority to summon any person
to give evidence or provide information.
These powers
are reinforced under Section 18(1) of the Parliamentary Powers and Privileges
Act, which accords Parliament and its committees the same powers as the High
Court. Subsection (3) allows Parliament to order the arrest of individuals who
fail to honour summons.
Backing the
hardline approach, Narok Senator Ledama Ole Kina urged the Senate to fully
exercise its enforcement powers to protect devolution.
“The only way
you can protect devolution is by making sure that you call these people to
account,” he said, calling for the use of enforcement mechanisms available to
Parliament.
With audit
hearings set to resume later this month, the Senate hopes the new rules will
curb delays and restore discipline in county accountability processes.