Senators move to freeze funds for Governors who skip audit hearings
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The Senate now wants to freeze funds for county governments whose Governors fail to appear before its committees to respond to audit queries raised by the Auditor General.
The Senate is now targeting Governors who have been snubbing
invitations to appear before the County Public Accounts Committee to respond to
issues raised in audit reports regarding their counties’ financial management.
The committee, chaired by Homa Bay Senator Moses Kajwang,
has reportedly faced repeated cases where Governors fail to attend sessions
meant to scrutinise the use of public funds.
According to the proposed motion, the Senate plans to compel
the Office of the Controller of Budget to exercise powers under Article 228(5)
of the Constitution and the Public Finance Management (PFM) Act to withhold
approval of withdrawals from a county revenue fund where a Governor has failed
or declined to appear before a Senate committee.
The Senate says the Controller of Budget will rely on a
letter from the Clerk of the Senate communicating a committee resolution as
sufficient evidence that a county Governor or accounting officer has failed to
appear before the committee, or that they have subsequently complied with the
summons.
Senators argue that some county bosses have repeatedly
failed to honour invitations and summons issued by the County Public Accounts
Committee, thereby contravening their constitutional and statutory duty to
account for funds allocated to their respective county governments.
According to the Senate, failure by Governors and relevant
accounting officers to appear before its committees undermines the chamber’s
constitutional oversight mandate and weakens accountability in the management
of public resources.
Parliament further warns that continued disregard of Senate
invitations and summons sets a precedent that erodes the principles of
transparency, accountability and respect for constitutional institutions.
Governors, however, have pushed back against the committee’s
actions, accusing some senators of turning the hearings into platforms for
extortion and political score-settling when county chiefs appear before them.


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