The Archbishop also expressed concern about politicians’ continued use of the church as a verbal attack platform.
The Catholic Church has now urged members of parliament to vote on the 2024/2025 Financial Bill independently, free from pressure from political parties, with the bill scheduled to be tabled on the House floor on Tuesday following a week-long break.
“Let us be guided by conscience, let nothing else influence our decision. Listen to the people and forget about the political divisions and pressures,” Muheria said.
“This is not about which side or political persuasion youāre on; itās about the good and welfare of Kenyans. Let us vote and legislate for what best serves more than 80% of this country.”
Speaking in Nyeri, Archbishop Muheria denounced the government for failing to acknowledge the hardships that Kenyans are facing as a result of the current harsh economic climate.
“The disdain and disregard for the opinions that have been given need reflection. Our government and leaders at all levels must listen to what Kenyans have said,” Muheria stated.
“Bulldozing ideas because they think it is the right thing is not the way to go. There must be a better way to reach the same goals. Government, people, churchāall of us have the same objective: the welfare of our country.”