Kenyan Parliament Vote A Win for President’s Foes
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NAIROBI, Kenya — Legislators chose an opposition member as Parliament speaker in a close vote yesterday, giving a victory to foes of Kenya’s president as they prepared for mass protest rallies that raised fears of new violence over last month’s disputed election.
Soldiers stood guard outside the National Assembly, and security forces were expected to be out in force today to guard against unrest with the start of three days of demonstrations against President Kibaki.
The legislative session was the first time that Mr. Kibaki and opposition leader Raila Odinga were together since Mr. Odinga accused Mr. Kibaki of rigging the December 27 presidential ballot. The two arrived at the National Assembly at the same time but studiously ignored each other.
Kenneth Marende, a 52-year-old lawyer and opposition supporter, was elected speaker of the National Assembly in a narrow 105–101 vote over a Kibaki loyalist.
Although foreign and local observers say the tally of the presidential election was deeply flawed, they found no problems with legislative voting that was led by Mr. Odinga’s forces and saw half of Mr. Kibaki’s Cabinet lose their seats.
Mr. Odinga’s Orange Democratic Movement won 99 seats in December’s election and had to rely on help from smaller parties to win the speaker fight. Mr. Kibaki’s party, which has only 43 seats, also rallied support from small blocs, indicating the potential for bitter fights in the body.
Mr. Marende’s victory buoyed the opposition. While the speaker cannot directly block Mr. Kibaki’s legislative agenda, he can slow it with his rulings and allow motions against the president’s policies to be debated.
The contest for speaker was acrimonious, echoing the bitterness that set off widespread violence in Kenya after Mr. Kibaki was announced as winner of the presidential election. More than 600 people have been reported killed. Mr. Odinga’s legislators initially insisted voting for speaker should not be secret. “We went into [the presidential] election with secret ballots, and you stole it,” a leading opposition figure, William Ruto, said.