Robert Mbui

Robert Mbui is a Kenyan politician. He is currently a member of the National Assembly representing Kathiani Constituency and Deputy Leader of Minority in the National Assembly. He is the fifth member of parliament to represent the constituency since its inception in 1988.[1] He holds a Master's in Strategic Management from the Kenya Institute of Management.

Mbui was first elected to Parliament in 2013. Prior to this he had served as the CDF chairman for the larger Kathiani constituency before Mavoko constituency was carved out of it from 2008 to 2011. During his tenure as CDF chair, he initiated many projects to improve the education and health sector. Under his stewardship the constituency fund was voted the best used in the country. His track record and social skills propelled him to the National Assembly where he is currently serving his second term. During the 2017 elections he was one of the best performers countrywide, garnering 40,000 votes against his closest rival's 1,000 votes.

Mbui belongs to the Wiper Democratic Movement and is currently the party's national organizing secretary.

Aside from politics Mbui has various investments, most notably in the education sector. He is the founder and owner of the Mutungoni Academy in Athi River.

Personal life

Mbui is a grandson to the late Army chief, General Jackson Mulinge.

Mbui is married to Janet Mbui, the director of the Mutungoni Academy School. Together they have two sons and a daughter: Carlton, Shawn and Lakita.

gollark: They're also horrible to run much on because Android is kind of poorly designed, but *oh well*.
gollark: Old phones have built-in long-duration battery backups, very low power draw, integrated screens for status monitoring, processors generally as good as or better as Raspberry Pis, and decently fast cellular modems.
gollark: I don't see why you would need *two* UPSes for two things.
gollark: Why spend money on expensive UPSes when you could run your servers on old phones?
gollark: My important stuff is replicated to my laptop, which is *relatively* portable.

References

  1. Victor Nzuma (19 November 2014). "Kathiani MP Robert Mbui calls for disbandment of Nacada". Standard Digital News.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.