Boni Khalwale | |
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Member of the Kenyan Senate | |
In office 28 March 2013 – Aug 2017 |
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Constituency | Kakamega County |
Member of the Kenyan Parliament | |
In office 2002–2013 |
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Constituency | Ikolomani |
Personal details | |
Born |
Kenya Colony |
5 August 1960
Nationality | Kenyan |
Political party | UDF |
Spouse(s) | Two |
Children | Several |
Alma mater | University of Nairobi |
Occupation | Politician |
Profession | Medical |
Boni Khalwale is a Kenyan politician, the Senator for Kakamega County and a former Medical Officer.
Khalwale was chair of the Parliamentary Accounts Committee in the 10th Kenyan Parliament, where he made a reputation for leading censure motions against high profile cabinet ministers. He was appointed on a similar role in the 11th Kenyan Parliament. He was however removed from the role one and half years to the 2017 General Election. This was on ground that he could no longer be impartial in his work having publicly declared his intention to view for the Kakamega Gubernatorial Seat.
He was educated at Kakamega School. He graduated from the University of Nairobi with a degree in Medicine in 1981.
Like many families in Western Kenya, he lives a polygamous lifestyle; having two wives and several children.
He first ventured into politics in 2002 by winning the Ikolomani Constituency Parliamentary Seat on a NARC party ticket. In 2007, he retained the same seat on a New Ford Kenya party ticket.
His election as an MP in the Kenyan parliamentary election, 2007 was nullified in February 2011. Dr Boni Khalwale won back his Ikolomani seat on 23 May 2011, beating off a strong challenge from the Orange Democratic Movement, the dominant party in the region.
Voters in Ikolomani handed New Ford Kenya’s Dr Khalwale 13,208 votes, followed closely by Mr Bernard Shinali of ODM with 10,702. Ford People’s Collins Matemba came a distant third with 293 votes. A total of 24,592 voters out of the registered 35,833 voted in the 63 polling stations in a by-election were seen as a fight between ODM and New Ford-K.
The victory for the man, popularly referred to as the bullfighter, over Mr Shinali, whom he defeated with a slim margin of 200 votes in the 2007 elections, must came in the wake of high-profile campaigns mounted by the then ODM leadership led by Deputy Prime Minister Musalia Mudavadi.
The defeat was seen as a blow not only to Mr Mudavadi but also ODM which was restamping its authority in the region where it has more MPs than any other, and as a boost to the presidential ambitions of Saboti MP Eugene Wamalwa who along with Housing minister Soita Shitanda for the New Ford-K candidate. The by-election was unique in that it attracted leaders Cyrus Jirongo, Mukhisa Kituyi (from Western, Martha Karua and Peter Kenneth from Mount Kenya region to campaign for him. The group were seen to have come together based on their political activism relationship.