A political firestorm erupted in Parliament on Monday after Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi and Principal Secretary Chris Kiptoo failed to appear before a high-level parliamentary committee probing the stalled release of KES 30 billion earmarked for the Rural Electrification Program.
The two senior officials had been summoned to explain why funds meant to expand electricity access in marginalized communities had not been disbursed — a matter legislators say is of urgent national importance. Their no-show has triggered bipartisan fury, with MPs calling for nothing short of impeachment.
“This is beyond disrespect. It is a deliberate, contemptuous betrayal of public trust,” thundered an MP during a heated session in the National Assembly. “We are done with excuses. The only logical step now is to initiate impeachment proceedings.”
The Heart of the Matter: Power for the Powerless
The KES 30 billion in question was allocated under the Rural Electrification Program administered by Kenya Power and Lighting Company (KPLC), targeting off-grid and underserved rural areas. The funds were part of the government’s broader development blueprint to ensure universal electricity access and bridge the rural-urban divide.
For many communities, particularly in the arid and semi-arid regions, the delay is not just a matter of inconvenience but a denial of opportunity. Hospitals operate without power, schools remain unequipped for digital learning, and local businesses struggle to grow.
MPs, especially those from marginalized counties, say their constituents are being shortchanged — and they’re placing the blame squarely on Treasury’s doorstep.
Political Fallout: A Threat to the Raila-Ruto Truce?
CS John Mbadi’s involvement has added a layer of political volatility to the scandal. A long-time ODM loyalist and former Minority Leader in Parliament, Mbadi was appointed Treasury CS as part of the groundbreaking political cooperation pact between ODM leader Raila Odinga and President William Ruto following the 2024 Gen Z protests.
Dubbed by some as the “second handshake,” the Raila-Ruto accord was widely viewed as a necessary compromise to stabilize a divided nation and facilitate bipartisan reforms. Mbadi’s Cabinet entry was symbolic — a gesture of ODM’s commitment to working with government in the interest of national unity.
Now, however, that symbol is under siege.
“Mbadi isn’t just a Cabinet Secretary. He is the face of our party’s willingness to sit at the table with government,” one ODM MP said. “His arrogance and dereliction today put that entire agreement at risk.”
PS Kiptoo Under Scrutiny
Meanwhile, Principal Secretary Chris Kiptoo is facing separate allegations of blocking financial audits and withholding disclosures related to the stalled funds. Lawmakers allege there is growing suspicion that the funds have either been mismanaged, diverted, or lost in bureaucratic murk.
“PS Kiptoo has remained suspiciously silent. We can no longer assume this is administrative incompetence. There may be something much deeper here — potentially criminal,” said a member of the Public Investments Committee.
The absence of both officials has raised alarms not only about accountability but about internal dysfunction within the Treasury.
Next Steps: Impeachment in Motion?
Parliament is expected to draft a formal impeachment motion as early as this week, with sources indicating that both ODM and UDA legislators are rallying support behind the scenes. The move could test the strength of the Raila-Ruto alliance and force political heavyweights to pick a side.
Speaker Moses Wetang’ula has reportedly ordered an emergency session of the relevant House Committees to deliberate the way forward.
In Kenya’s recent political history, few Cabinet Secretaries have faced the full force of impeachment. If pursued, the motion against Mbadi and Kiptoo could signal a turning point in how Parliament deals with Executive accountability.
The rural electrification scandal is now seen as more than just a financial lapse. It is a political litmus test — for the Raila-Ruto coalition, for Treasury’s integrity, and for Parliament’s resolve to hold the Executive accountable.
As the country watches, the stakes couldn’t be higher.
Will the handshake survive the shock? Will rural Kenya finally get the power it was promised? Or is this the beginning of another political rupture?








Leave a Reply