All that is nonsense and does not impress seasoned judges. At this point the judges are very focused and I believe they know exactly what they want. There are two dwelling theories here; whether elections are about the process or merely numbers at the end like the party nominations. I think this time around the court must pay attention to the process because the constitution seems to do so. A lot of people are being disillusioned by this lack of attention to the process and its encouraging the thieves because they believe they can steal with impunity. Jubilites argument is that the huge numbers cannot be overturned regardless of how they were achieved. This court must reject that argument. The end should never justify the means.
plo delivered the best closing submission so far.That was his job the rest having dealt with the law and the facts of the case.Next will be Ngatia to shine. BTW Amollo pythogras nonsense is part of the in admissable evidence that were expunged.
True.
NASWA's job is to prove that the process what irredeemably flawed that any output is unreliable.
But honestly, even here they are struggling
1. The strongest claim; ungazetted polling station has been debunked
2. 'ungazetted' returning/presiding officers are nothing but dropouts
3. Forms 34A and B are yet to be yet again scrutinized.
I'm sure the question of 'statistics' and 'data' will haunt Jubilee.
Another is declaration of results without all forms 34A. The argument that Bomas was not bound to gather all forms 34A since they had received forms 34B is a minefield and I'm keen on hearing how this pans out.
If constituency results are final, should the commissioners demand sight of forms 34A first before declaring?