Not everything in Govt is alright, but we haven’t failed, Mudavadi says

The Prime Cabinet Secretary and Cabinet Secretary for Foreign and Diaspora Affairs Musalia Mudavadi has acknowledged that there are some challenges the government is grappling with.
Speaking on March 3, during a funeral service for late Malava MP Moses Malulu Injendi in Lugusi village, Mudavadi noted that not everything is alright in government.
This, he said was as is being experienced with new Social Health Authority (SHA), uncompleted construction of promised roads, challenges with Higher education funding model among other major projects being undertaken by the Kenya Kwanza administration.
However, he assured Kenyans that despite these challenges, the government had not failed and was not on the path to failure.
He said it was important for him not to say everything is working at 100 per cent when there are some teething and emerging challenges hindering efficient service delivery.
In his speech, he called for calm as the government addresses these issues
“We are on the right course, we are on the right track,” he said adding that developing will be realized if leaders, especially politicians remained truthful, committed and created solid friendships across the political divide.
At this time, Mudavadi recalled how it was easy to trace the late area MP Peter Soita Shitanda through Malulu and vice versa and how that friendship led to development.
Mudavadi noted that through his demeanour, Malulu had created a network of friends through which he used to work behind the scenes, thoroughly and mobilise for projects in the constituency.
Also, he noted that Malulu was the brain behind so many pieces of legislations that have been very instrumental.
Tellingly, he revealed that Malulu’s love for education manifested itself in how he worked at the Parliamentary Committee on Education, drafting guidelines that assisted so many regions, including Malava itself.
He said that Malava had, through the late MP’s efforts, rose to the top position across the whole country.