A defiant governor who repeatedly snubbed Senate committees now faces the consequences of his contemptuous conduct
The chickens have finally come home to roost for Isiolo Governor Abdi Guyo, whose brazen defiance of Senate authority has culminated in an impeachment trial that threatens to end his political career.
As Speaker Amason Kingi schedules a special plenary session for July 8-9 to hear impeachment charges, the embattled governor finds himself in the unenviable position of defending his actions before the very institution he has repeatedly disrespected.
A Pattern of Contempt
Governor Guyo’s troubled relationship with the Senate reads like a masterclass in political self-destruction. Over his three-year tenure, he has systematically snubbed Senate committees, ignored summons, and displayed what can only be described as institutional contempt.
When the powerful County Public Accounts Committee (CPAC) visited Isiolo last year, Guyo was conspicuously absent.
Not only did he fail to appear, but he allegedly directed senior staff to leave and locked senators out of the county headquarters entirely.
The committee’s response was swift and damning, declaring Isiolo County “a crime scene.”
Rather than showing contrition, Guyo doubled down on his defiance.
At a public function shortly after the CPAC visit, he brazenly declared that he had “discretion on whether or not to honour senate summons” – a statement that would prove prophetic in sealing his fate.
The Cost of Arrogance

Isiolo Governor Abdi Guyo appearing before the parliamentary committee.
The governor’s contemptuous attitude has come at a significant financial and political cost.
He has been fined Sh500,000 twice – once by the County Public Accounts Committee and again by the Committee on Labour and Social Welfare – for ignoring summons.
The Parliamentary Powers and Privileges Act has been invoked against him, with the Inspector General of Police directed to arrest and present him before committees.
Senator Boni Khalwale’s prescient warning during a Finance and Budget Committee meeting in October 2024 now appears prophetic: “Do you appreciate the fact that this Senate holds your fate in its hands? The level of impunity that you have demonstrated towards the Senate will fall on you as governor.”
Guyo’s problems extend beyond mere procedural violations.
His conduct has been marked by personal attacks on senators, including alleged sexist remarks against Senator Fatuma Dullo during Madaraka Day celebrations.
His confrontational exchanges with senators have been characterized by inflammatory rhetoric, including telling Narok Senator Ledama ole Kina to “take your threats to Narok.”
The impeachment charges paint a picture of a governor who has treated his office as personal property.
He stands accused of employing a bloated workforce, including 36 advisors when the legal limit is three, and 31 chief officers for a county with only six departments.
More damning, he has failed to deliver the constitutionally mandated Annual State of the County Address for three consecutive years.
The Reckoning
As the Isiolo County Assembly voted overwhelmingly to impeach him – with only two of 18 members declining to endorse the charges – Guyo’s fate now rests with the same senators he has spent years antagonizing.
The charges include gross violation of the Constitution, abuse of office, and gross misconduct.
Speaker Kingi’s communication to the House captured the gravity of Guyo’s conduct: “The conduct of the governor not only undermines the rule of law but obstructs the Senate from discharging its role as the protector of counties under Article 96(1) of the Constitution.”
A Weakened Position
As Guyo prepares his defense, he does so from a position of unprecedented weakness.
His repeated no-shows, contemptuous remarks, and institutional defiance have eroded any goodwill he might have enjoyed among senators.
The very people who will decide his political fate are those he has spent years treating with disdain.
The irony is palpable: a governor who declared he had “discretion” over Senate summons now finds himself compelled to appear before senators whose authority he repeatedly questioned.
His political survival depends entirely on the mercy of an institution he has systematically undermined.
When the Senate convenes next week, it will be more than just an impeachment trial – it will be a reckoning for a governor whose arrogance and impunity have finally caught up with him.
The residents of Isiolo, who celebrated in the streets following his impeachment, seem to have already rendered their verdict.
For Abdi Guyo, the man who once dared senators to act against him, the moment of truth has arrived.
His political future now depends on the very constitutional process he spent years trying to subvert. In the end, his greatest enemy may prove to be his own hubris.
The Senate plenary session begins Tuesday, July 8, 2025, at 2:30 PM.
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