Starehe Member of Parliament Amos Mwago has revealed they faced blackmail and threats ahead of the vote on the controversial Finance Bill of 2024.
Mwago, a legislator from the Jubilee Party, was among the 115 MPs who voted against the bill, which eventually passed to the Third Reading with approval from 204 MPs.
According to Mwago, during the bill and budget deliberations for 2024/25, Treasury officials warned MPs that failure to pass the Finance Bill would lead to funding cuts.
"There were some elements who were trying to blackmail the MPs. If you look at the budget-making process, it is not an event but a process that entails a lot and requires coordination between the Treasury, the Budget Committee, and the Finance Committee.
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Mp Starehe Amos, I REJECT THIS BILL#REJECTFINANCEBILL2024 pic.twitter.com/Vx25PVIsQT
— Kevin Nesh (@kevonene) June 20, 2024
"When these people were drafting this, they acted as if they were not in tandem with what the people on the ground were saying. They tried to blackmail us by making threats that they would cut funding for JSS, the medical interns, and CDF.
"But these measures were like the last stroke that kicked a dying horse because we were trying to bring the measures inside parliament when the mood was so clear that we were going to vote against the bill," Mwago said during the K24 New Dawn show on Friday, June 21, 2024.
The MP stated that threatening MPs with cuts to essential service funds was a tactic aimed at manipulating emotions to garner support for the bill.
"When they saw the bill was going to fail, that is when they pulled that card, which even the Minority Leader argued against. He said that the CS for Treasury does not have the mandate to address parliament.
"By trying to say he was cutting the funding, he was trying to elicit public emotions, trying to show people that failure to pass the bill would affect their livelihoods. But that is not true.
"In the last Finance Bill, coming into the end of the financial year, they missed the target by over Ksh200 billion in revenue collection. What did they do? They started cutting capital spending and recurrent spending," Mwago added.