256. Amendment by parliamentary initiative

(a) may be introduced in either House of Parliament;
(b) may not address any other matter apart from consequential amendments to legislation arising from the Bill;
(c) shall not be called for second reading in either House within ninety days after the first reading of the Bill in that House; and
(d) shall have been passed by Parliament when each House of Parliament has passed the Bill, in both its second and third readings, by not less than two-thirds of all the members of that House.
(2) Parliament shall publicise any Bill to amend this Constitution, and facilitate public discussion about the Bill.
(3) After Parliament passes a Bill to amend this Constitution, the Speakers of the two Houses of Parliament shall jointly submit to the President--
(a) the Bill, for assent and publication; and
(b) a certificate that the Bill has been passed by Parliament in accordance with this Article.
(4) Subject to clause (5), the President shall assent to the Bill and cause it to be published within thirty days after the Bill is enacted by Parliament.
(5) If a Bill to amend this Constitution proposes an amendment relating to a matter specified in Article 255 (1)--
(a) the President shall, before assenting to the Bill, request the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission to conduct, within ninety days, a national referendum for approval of the Bill; and
(b) within thirty days after the chairperson of the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission has certified to the President that the Bill has been approved in accordance with Article 255 (2), the President shall assent to the Bill and cause it to be published.
- < 255. Amendment of this Constitution
- 257. Amendment by popular initiative >
The Constitution of Kenya
- Preamble
- Chapter One - Sovereignty of the People and Supremacy of this Constitution
- Chapter Two - The Republic
- Chapter Three - Citizenship
- Chapter Four - The Bill of Rights
- Chapter Five - Land and Environment
- Chapter Six - Leadership and Integrity
- Chapter Seven - Representation of the People
- Chapter Eight - The Legislature
- Chapter Nine - The Executive
- Chapter Ten - Judiciary
- Chapter Eleven - Devolved Government
- Chapter Twelve - Public Finance
- Chapter Thirteen - The Public Service
- Chapter Fourteen - National Security
- Chapter Fifteen - Commissions and Independent Offices
- Chapter Sixteen - Amendment of this Constitution
- Chapter Seventeen - General Provisions
- Chapter Eighteen - Transitional and Consequential Provisions
- Schedules - Schedules
Commissioners Charter
- Article 1: Interpretation of Terms
- Article 10: Meetings
- Article 11: Commitment
- Article 12: Meetings by Technology
- Article 13: Committees of the Commission
- Article 14: Independence in Decision Making
- Article 15: Conflict of Interest
- Article 16: Confidentiality
- Article 17: Dissent by a Member
- Article 18: Induction and Capacity Development
- Article 19: Performance Evaluation
- Article 2: Background
- Article 20: Review of Charter
- Article 21: Commitment to the Charter
- Article 3: Objectives of the Charter
- Article 4: Conduct
- Article 5: Vision, Mission and Values
- Article 6: Scope of Responsibility
- Article 7: The Role and Responsibility of the Chairperson
- Article 8: The Role and Responsibilities of Commissioners
- Article 9: The Role and Responsibilities of the Commission Secretary