President Kenyatta has reshuffled government departments and made
appointments which define the distribution of power and influence in the
new regime.
Rich parastatals and influential departments have been distributed to the 18 ministries in a circular issued Tuesday evening.
The new structure collapses the 44 ministries of the Kibaki
government to create super-ministries with huge budgets and even bigger
responsibilities.
Typically, the bigger the budget and the more the responsibilities, the more influential the minister.
Also, jobs which allow the holder to work in close proximity to the President are deemed more desirable and influential.
In the new system, constitutional commissions cease to be stand alone
and now fall under a parent ministry, depending on the nature of their
work.
But although the commissions remain independent, they have a
responsibility to the cabinet secretaries in charge of the ministries
they fall under.
State House roles have also been split into three — offices of Chief of Staff, Private Secretary and State House Comptroller.
Mr Jomo Gecaga is the President’s private secretary, while Mr
Lawrence Lenayapa is the Comptroller. The Chief of Staff’s office
remains vacant.
Ambiguous entity
Interior and National Coordination and the Executive Office of the Presidency have been grouped in a new ambiguous entity.
The executive office of the presidency and deputy president has major
government functions and share some responsibilities — appointment of
public servants, including cabinet secretaries, ambassadors, high
commissioners, principal secretaries and chairpersons of state
corporations.
The Office of the First Lady and the Officer of the Deputy President’s Spouse fall under the executive cluster.
There will also be an office of proclamation of public holidays and
overall policy direction and leadership. The Ministry of Devolution and
Planning, headed by Ms Anne Waiguru, is clearly one of the most
powerful. It falls under the presidency and has taken over many of the
functions played by the former Prime Minister.
The ministry will accommodate constitutional commissions and
independent offices, including Transition Authority, Public Service
Commission, Youth Enterprise Development Fund, Kenya National Youth
Council, Women Enterprise Fund, National Youth Service, NGO Board and
the NGO Coordination Bureau, among others.
The National Treasury will be in charge of the Central Bank of Kenya,
Kenya Revenue Authority, Kenya Competition Authority, Privatisation
Commission and the Capital Markets Authority.
The constitutional offices under the National Treasury include
Auditor General, Commission on Revenue Allocation, Salaries and
Remuneration Commission, Anti-money Laundering Authority and the
Financial Reporting Centre.
The Agriculture ministry is one of the largest, taking charge of 40
government functions and 42 state corporations. It includes the
livestock and fisheries departments.
The Ministry of Education will have the Department of Education and Department of Science and Technology.
Lands, Housing and Urban Development, another mega-ministry, will
have the National Land Commission under its umbrella, the National
Housing Corporation and the National Construction Authority.
The ministry will take care of rural settlement, land information
system, housing policy management, management of building and
construction standards and codes, physical planning and the national
spatial data infrastructure, among others.
The Office of the Attorney-General and Department of Justice will be
in charge of legal policy management, constitutional affairs, national
registries, legislative drafting, college of arms, anti-corruption
strategies, integrity and ethics, political parties’ policy management
and election policy management.
Principal legal advisor
The AG will also retain his role as the principal legal advisor to the government.
It will be in charge of the Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission,
Interim Electoral and Boundaries Commission, Kenya National Human Rights
and Equality Commission and the Gender and Equality Commission.
This will also be the Judiciary’s parent ministry.
Also clustered under it are the Kenya School of Law, Kenya Law Reform
Commission, Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission and the
National Anti-Corruption Campaign Steering Committee, Auctioneers
Licensing Board, Commission on the Implementation of the Constitution,
the National Crime Research Centre and the Council for Legal education,
among others.
The Information, Communication and Technology (ICT) docket will take
charge of digital innovations, which include the Konza Techology City
project.
It will also be in charge of departments for emerging trends and challenges, including stability.
The proposed civil service structure, according to the team that
spearheaded the new government formation, should be implemented and
tested for five years without alteration.
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