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Kenya's National Assembly appeals court ruling declaring President Ruto's Cabinet unconstitutional over gender rule

Kenya's National Assembly and Speaker Moses Wetangula filed a Notice of Appeal on July 10 against a June 30 High Court judgment that declared President William Ruto's Cabinet composition unconstitutional for failing to meet the constitution's two-thirds gender principle; Parliament also contests whether the gender requirement is immediately enforceable in appointive positions

Courts·Leaders· pending-decision Who Decides·The Long Game ·5 takes · ·rbtfl upd Jul 11, 2026
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The split

The same story, as told by newsrooms in different countries. Their words, attributed and linked.

Kenya

Switch TV Kenya

“Kenya's National Assembly has formally challenged a High Court ruling that declared President William Ruto's Cabinet unconstitutional for failing to meet the Constitution's two-thirds gender requirement.”

Kenyan broadcast media; earliest report of the appeal filing; frames it as a direct challenge to the court's interpretation of gender-representation rules for appointed officesread the original ↗

Kenya

Capital FM Kenya

“Parliament is also contesting the court's interpretation that the constitutional gender requirement is immediately enforceable in appointive offices.”

Kenyan commercial radio; adds the specific legal ground that Parliament contests the enforceability of the gender quota in appointive offices, a narrower but consequential point of lawread the original ↗

Kenya

Breaking Kenya News

“Parliament alongside Speaker Moses Wetangula have lodged a Notice of Appeal signalling their intention to challenge part of the June 30, 2026 judgment.”

Kenyan digital news; details the joint filing by Parliament and Speaker Wetangula and situates the case in Kenya's ongoing gender-representation legal battlesread the original ↗

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Summary

Kenya's National Assembly filed a Notice of Appeal on July 10 challenging a June 30, 2026 High Court judgment that declared President William Ruto's Cabinet unconstitutional for failing to meet the constitution's two-thirds gender rule. The appeal was filed jointly with National Assembly Speaker Moses Wetangula. Parliament also contests the court's conclusion that the gender requirement is immediately enforceable in appointive positions, a legal question that could affect gender-quota obligations across government beyond the Cabinet.

Why it matters

The case tests whether Kenya's constitutional gender quota, intended for elected offices, extends to presidential appointments. If the Court of Appeal upholds the High Court, Ruto faces pressure to restructure the Cabinet or risk further legal exposure. The outcome will also determine whether the gender rule applies immediately or only after legislative implementation.

What to watch

  • Whether the Court of Appeal grants an interim stay of the High Court ruling pending appeal
  • Whether Ruto announces any Cabinet reshuffle while the case is in flight
  • The appellate court's ruling on the enforceability of the gender quota in appointive offices

The briefing, by email