Ndindi Nyoro promises to unveil political direction in 3 to 4 weeks

Brian Kimani
By Brian Kimani June 27, 2026 06:49 (EAT)
Add as a Preferred Source on Google
Ndindi Nyoro promises to unveil political direction in 3 to 4 weeks

Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro speaks at Deliverance Church, Christ Centre, Kahawa Sukari, on June 13, 2026. Photo/Courtesy

Vocalize Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Vocalize

Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro has asked Kenyans to give him three to four weeks to publicly outline his political direction and his vision for the country's future.

Speaking during a press briefing on Saturday, Nyoro said he would soon make his position clear regarding the country's political landscape and the role he intends to play going forward.

"I request Kenyans to give me three to four weeks to share my views on that issue of political formation and the things that we need to do in terms of our Republic of Kenya going forward," Nyoro stated.

The former National Assembly Budget and Appropriations Committee chair also dismissed claims that he is a political double agent, insisting that his actions and public positions speak for themselves.

"I have been handling my issues alone. What you see is what you see. What I'm saying today, when I come maybe in three to four weeks and give my views, Kenyans will see what I've been doing is just," he said.

Nyoro maintained that he had already parted ways with the government, adding that politicians, rather than ordinary Kenyans, were behind persistent questions regarding his political allegiance.

"It's clear that I left government. But I keep answering this question not because Kenyans ask me, but because politicians keep provoking me to defend it," he stated.

The Kiharu lawmaker further pointed to his criticism of government economic policies as evidence that he no longer supports the Kenya Kwanza administration.

"The things I've been saying, especially matters to do with the economy, there's no way you can do those things when you're supporting the government. If you were supporting it, you would simply give your views internally," Nyoro said.

"I keep on giving alternative voices even in public and Parliament because Kenyans are quite aware we no longer support the government of the day and how it runs its affairs," he added.

Addressing concerns over his absence during the voting on the Finance Bill, Nyoro said he had consistently participated in previous debates and voting processes on the legislation.

"Kenyans asked me about instances when I wasn't present during voting in the National Assembly. To be truthful, during every Finance Bill debate in the past, including last year's, I was present, shared my views and voted," he said.

Nyoro also explained why he chose not to participate in the impeachment process against former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua, saying the decision was guided by his conscience and Christian values.

"The whole issue started during the impeachment. It was not an event, it was a process. I didn't participate and I went to the people promoting it," he said.

"I looked at it as a Christian and a person before being a politician and decided not to participate. I told them my conscience is not here and I won't participate. Whatever cost I needed to pay, I was ready for it and I wouldn't blame anyone."

Nyoro suggested that his decision may have contributed to his removal as chair of the Budget and Appropriations Committee.

"Maybe that's why even when I was kicked out of the Budget chairmanship, I called the media. You all expected me to go berserk but I didn't because it was primarily out of the decision I took then," he stated.

Join the Discussion

Share your perspective with the Citizen Digital community.

Moderation applies

Sign In to Publish

No comments yet

This discussion is waiting for your voice. Be the first to share your thoughts!