A second order was Friday issued by the High Court stopping the implementation of the Finance Act 2023.
This follows an application filed by one Peter Agoro, who argues that the Finance Bill 2023 was founded on illegality and thereby infringes and violates the Constitution.
The order dated June 30, 2023, was given by Justice Mugure Thande.
In the first application, orders were granted by Justice Thande in a case in which Busia Senator Okiya Omtatah challenged the Act on grounds that the Senate was not involved.
The two matters will be mentioned on July 5 for further directions.
Omtatah said that the Finance Act contains amendments to several laws that have nothing to do with raising revenue and laws that affect the work of the Senate to protect the interests of counties and their governments.
“Forcing employees to contribute an amount of money based on the applicable blanket deductible percentage without consideration of their existing contractual obligations on their salaries is not reasonable,” Omtatah said.
He further argues it is a mandatory condition precedent that, before the Bill can be introduced for consideration in the originating House, a Speaker of one House of Parliament must first seek the concurrence of the Speaker of the other House of Parliament.
“In direct contravention of the mandatory requirement that any Bill introduced in the National Assembly, which includes provisions pertaining to county governments, must also be introduced to the Senate for concurrence, the Finance Bill 2023 was not submitted to the Senate,” he states.
He now wants the court to quash some Sections of the Original Finance Act 2023 which did not get input from the Senate adding that the Speaker of the National Assembly violated Article 110(3) of the Constitution by introducing the Finance Bill 2023 in the National Assembly without first determining, jointly with the Speaker of the Senate, whether the Act concerned county government.
Some of the sections of the Act were to be rolled out on July 1. BY THE STAR