257.
(1) An amendment to this Constitution may be proposed by a popular initiative signed by at least one million registered voters.
(2) A popular initiative for an amendment to this Constitution may be in the form of a general suggestion or a formulated draft Bill.
(3) If a popular initiative is in the form of a general suggestion, the promoters of that popular initiative shall formulate it into a draft Bill.
(4) The promoters of a popular initiative shall deliver the draft Bill and the supporting signatures to the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission, which shall verify that the initiative is supported by at least one million registered voters.
(5) If the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission is satisfied that the initiative meets the requirements of this Article, the Commission shall submit the draft Bill to each county assembly for consideration within three months after the date it was submitted by the Commission.
(6) If a county assembly approves the draft Bill within three months after the date it was submitted by the Commission, the speaker of the county assembly shall deliver a copy of the draft Bill jointly to the Speakers of the two Houses of Parliament, with a certificate that the county assembly has approved it.
(7) If a draft Bill has been approved by a majority of the county assemblies, it shall be introduced in Parliament without delay.
(
A Bill under this Article is passed by Parliament if supported by a majority of the members of each House.
(9) If Parliament passes the Bill, it shall be submitted to the President for assent in accordance with Articles 256 (4) and (5).
(10) If either House of Parliament fails to pass the Bill, or the Bill relates to a matter mentioned in 255 (1), the proposed amendment shall be submitted to the people in a referendum.
(11) Article 255 (2) applies, with any necessary modifications, to a referendum under clause (10).
Is Peter Wanyama the judiciary. All these issues are before the court. And including more.
Ruto strategy should be to fight this through the judiciary. Uhuru the key proponent doesn't have time.
Once Judiciary declare any of the process leading to this "easy" process null and void - its back to square one.
Already they are breaking so many rules.
Yes majority in parliament after MCA can ammend the katiba - but they must follow very strict process,
Again because BBI is one package - how does president decides this one need a referendum and this one doesn't.
Bottomline this will be long battle in courts...and Uhuru doesnt have that ime.
Wakili Peter Wanyama:
Referendum NOT needed on 98 % of clauses in the BBI
BBI is a political process; whoever controls the numbers wins. By the way, there is one fundamental issue that should be addressed now. If more than 24 County Assemblies and Parliament pass the bill, the Constitution will stand amended on the clauses that dont require a referendum. In my considered view, only a few clauses in the bill should be subjected to a vote. The clauses touching on the protected parts of the Constitution. Not all of them. In this regard, the Constitution of Kenya will be amended for the first time very soon without a plebiscite. Therefore, the UDA strategy of mobilising the 'hustlers' to reject the bill at referendum stage is not a strategy at all; because these other guys will still win -a half bite of the cherry-even if they lose the final vote. In Parliament, a bill that emanates from the County Assemblies requires a simply majority to pass and not a two thirds threshold. It is soo easy to amend the Constitution. Aaaaah ! Let me break this down little bit.
BBI proposes to increase the number of MPs, create the office of Prime Minister , alter the composition of the Cabinet and increase the allocation to counties upto 35 % . From a constitutional standpoint you dont require a referendum to pass these proposals. If you study the BBI proposals very carefully, you will note that we actually dont need a referendum on 98 % of the proposals in the Bill. Only one proposal, the creation of the office of Judiciary Ombusman- because it affects the independence of JSC- requires a referendum.
The drafters of BBI are political and legal geniuses. Hats off.
You heard it first here.
I think most of the stuff will stand amended once Parliament passes the bill