Editor's Review

Kuria is among many Tanga Tanga leaders who opposed the BBI and was bold in pushing for "No referendum before elections".

The Supreme  Court of Kenya is today expected to make a ruling on the Building Bridges Initiative appeal that was brought before it by Attorney General Paul Kihara and two others.

The ruling comes at a time when 2022 succession politics have reached fever pitch and leaders across the political divide are lashing out at each other in a bid to woo Kenyans to their side.

The outcome of the ruling will no doubt throw the ongoing campaigns into a spin as it will form a major topic of discussion in political scenes in the coming days.

Gatundu South MP Moses Kuria has weighed in on the looming judgement even as he maintained yet again that the BBI substance was good for the country.

Kuria noted that the Court, in the event makes a favourable ruling on the BBI,  he will take a front-row seat in pushing for the BBI.

He said he will want the BBI immediately implemented as soon as possible if Supreme Court approves the appeal.

{Supreme Court of Kenya. Image:Courtesy}

"The problem with BBI was never solely the substance; it was the process. The net effect of the Supreme Court ruling today will be a remedy to all the process maladies. If the SC rules in favour of BBI, that will cleanse the process. I will be at the forefront in pushing for immediate implementation," he said.

The ruling is set to shape the conversation in the coming even as the August 9, polls is a few months ago.

Kuria is among many Tanga Tanga leaders who opposed the BBI and was bold in pushing for "No referendum before elections".