Mudavadi’s Earthquake Brings Down OKA
Written by RadioVuna on January 23, 2022
There were sirens, surprises, and political statements in Mudavadi’s Sunday announcement. It was a “earthquake” in its own right.
OKA principal, who was introduced as the ANC presidential candidate, delivered a forceful address in which he attacked the current administration, citing concern over the increasing public debt, wanton fraud and increased occurrences of insecurity in the nation.
It’s no secret that Kenya is in dire financial straights. The national debt of Kenya is soaring. As Mudavadi said on Sunday, “the country is in danger of being auctioned off to foreign lenders, the whole country is underwater, and essential infrastructure has been mortgaged.”
Because of this, our national debt is becoming a danger to our safety. It is imperative that we do all we can to protect our nation from the oncoming threat,”
He claims that Kenya is now sitting on a ticking time bomb, and that unemployment and the nation’s insatiable need for borrowing are hastening its detonation.
As a result of the PPP, “the private entities are those in government and their families.” The ANC’s chairman said that these cartels don’t even pay taxes.
This assault on Raila Odinga’s ‘Azimio la Umoja’ clarion appeal by Mudavadi, another presidential candidate, was the substance of Mudavadi’s Sunday announcement.
Although Mudavadi said that the ANC is now looking for new political allies, he ruled out the idea of reuniting with the ANC’s previous allies in arms.
As Mudavadi put it in simple English, “We may not know who is coming with us, but we know who it will not be, it will not be people that you can’t trust,” he stated.
As for partnerships, “Azimio is not an option, as azimo is about the self-preservation of people, wamepoteza frequency in the network,” he says.
He also took aim at the historic handshake that brought Uhuru and Raila together on March 12, 2018, accusing them of sitting on the fence while violent crime and cold-blooded killings continue to be recorded on a daily basis.
His reference to the Abimbo Mines, which collapsed and held numerous people for days, and the recent discovery of remains in the Yala River, which sparked a public outcry, sparked an inquiry.
Is there anybody left to shake hands with while it’s all going on? Mudavadi struck a posture.
Currently popularizing his campaign under the slogan “Uchumi Bora Pesa Mfukoni,” Mudavadi believes that if elected, his primary goal would be to rein in and reverse the nation’s spiraling public debt.
A debt regulator would be established during the first year of his presidency, according to Mudavadi, who is working on renegotiating the loans with creditors.
Both punitive taxes and decentralization, as well as the agricultural and industrial sectors are on the presidential hopeful’s list of agenda items in his platform.