Questions arise over President Ruto's growing list of advisors
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Questions have
arisen over the increasing number of President William Ruto’s advisors at State
House, with the number doubling despite the Head of State promising to reduce
it by half.
The recent
addition of Prof. Makau Mutua, who is ODM leader Raila Odinga’s close ally, and
Jaoko Oburu, the son of Siaya Senator Oburu Odinga, has clogged an already
bloated government.
This even after, at
the height of the Gen Z protests, the President promised to reduce the cost of
running government by slashing the number of his advisors by half.
"The number
of advisors in government shall be reduced by 50 within the public service with
immediate effect," President Ruto said on July 5, 2024.
From about 7
advisors, the number has risen to about 17 in just over 10 months, with more
signings during the broad-based exchange programme.
Prof. Makau Mutua,
a sworn critic of President William Ruto and a distinguished Kenyan-American
scholar, signed in this week as the president’s advisor on constitutional
matters.
A week earlier,
Jaoko Oburu, the son of Siaya Senator Oburu Odinga, was named the president’s
special advisor on economic empowerment and sustainable livelihoods.
The other advisors
include Prof. Abdi Guliye, Dominic Menjo, Nancy Laiboni, Henry Kinyua, Steven
Otieno, David Ndii, Augustine Cheruiyot, Moses Kuria, Mohamed Hassan, Prof.
Adams Oloo, Joe Ager, Dr. Silverstone Okumu, Prof. Edward Kisiangani, Harriete
Chiggai and Kennedy Ogeto.
The list is now
raising concerns about the President’s commitment to reduce wastage and
duplication of roles, with the cost of the advisors running into over a billion
shillings annually.
The colossal
number is a stark contrast to the 3 advisors that President Mwai Kibaki
appointed during his last tenure, including Raphael Tuju, who was appointed as
an advisor on matters media, and Prof. Kivutha Kibwana, who was appointed as
the advisor on youth and constitutional matters.
"You are
asked an assignment, like when there was a Ministry of Youth Affairs — you are
asked how should we do this? You do research, the matter is presented to the President,
and the President chooses what to do," Prof. Kivutha Kibwana, former
president’s advisor, stated.
The former Makueni
Governor poked holes into the quality, quantity, and caliber of President
Ruto’s plethora of advisors.
"One would
have to ask: is it because someone is a relative of a senior ODM person, or
what value do they bring? We want to see what that advice impacts in terms of
what the President is doing," Kibwana added.
Political pundits
and opposition leaders have opined that President Ruto has been awarding his
political cronies, especially after the courts slammed breaks on the
contentious Chief Administrative Secretaries’ posts.


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