Orengo dismisses 10-point agenda report as fraud
By Emmanuel Rono, March 11, 2026Siaya governor James Orengo has dismissed the recently released 10-point agenda report, terming it a fraud and questioning its credibility.
Speaking on Wednesday, March 11, 2026, just a day after the document was unveiled, Orengo said those who drafted it lacked sufficient content to justify its release, arguing that it does not provide meaningful direction on key national issues.
“This document that was released yesterday is a fraud,” Orengo said.
According to Orengo, the people who drafted the document lacked content to fill all the pages within the document.

He pointed to what he described as glaring gaps in the document, including several blank pages, which he said exposed the lack of substance in the report.
“It is a shame that the largest party in the Republic of Kenya purportedly lacked content to fill the pages, had no content at all, and it is a big shame to them,” Orengo said while showing some blank pages in the document.
Orengo said that the 10-point agenda was a ceasefire document written at a time when Kenyans were out demanding their rights, particularly citing the youth’s protest.
He said that the report came during the protests after the NADCO report. Orengo said he will rate the document at negative 1.
“The 10-point agenda, in my view was a ceasefire document written when Kenyans, particularly youths, were out demanding their rights; it was telling Kenyans to hold fire,” Orengo said.
Orengo’s remarks add to the growing criticism from a number of opposition political leaders who have questioned the relevance and depth of the 10-point agenda, which was presented as a framework outlining the priorities of the broad-based government.

He referred to the report as a call to action that the leaders are not going to take but rather the people of Kenya should take.
“What I can just say in a word is that the report issued yesterday was a call to action and that action is not going to be taken by governors, Members of Parliament, Members of County Assemblies; it will be taken by the people of Kenya,” Orengo noted.
10-Point Agenda
The meeting held at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre (KICC) in Nairobi on Tuesday, March 10, 2026, reviewed progress on how well the broad-based government agenda had been carried out over the past year and heard from the Oversight Committee about the status of the 10-point agenda agreed upon in the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between UDA and ODM.
The PG said that about 80 per cent of the agreed-upon commitments have been carried out.

The MoU, which is mostly based on the suggestions of the National Dialogue Committee (NADCO), talks about national issues like the cost of living, governance, economic stability, and reforms to institutions.
Members said that the partnership between the two parties has helped keep politics stable and made it easier for young people to find jobs and grow the economy, all while improving how the economy is run.