Matokeo ni kwamba imeanza kula kwa Chadema.
Hata Mhe Mbowe anaonekana kulainika ili kukwepa lawama za kusababisha wabunge wake kupigwa stop bungeni.
JK na Serikali yake watambuliwe ili yaishe. Tunamaliza muda mwiingi kulumbana kwa mambo ambayo hayana tija.
Wananchi watatupa kura tena kweli kwa vitendo hivi vya kihuni?
Tumejimaliza wenyewe, sasa tunachekwa na kila mtu ndani na nje ya nchi. What a shame!
Kishongo soma hii ya Warusi(Vyama vya Upinzani) waliotoka nje ya Ukumbi wa Bunge kupinga matokeo ya Kura kama walivofanya CHADEMA.
Swala la kuabika nje na ndani halipo Mhe.Kishongo. Hii ni sehemu ya Kikatiba ya upambanaji katika kudai haki.
Russian opposition parties walk out of Parliament, in protest of election results
Thu 15 Oct 2009
On 14 October three Russian opposition parties walked out of Parliament in a rare act of protest against the local poll held on 11 October. The parties also threatened to raise mass demonstrations against the election results which they say were rigged and turnout was much lower than reported. Official results showed Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's United Russia party - backed by President Dmitry Medvedev- winning nearly every poll by a wide margin, including in the capital Moscow.
Opposition critical for the first time
None of the three protesting parties -the nationalist Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR), the A Just Russia party, and the Communist Party -is usually critical of the Kremlin. Liberal opposition parties are not represented in Parliament and are marginalized in state media.
The ultra-nationalist LDPR was the first to blame PM Putin for an unworkable system and demanded a vote recount at every polling station after accusing United Russia of having "fraudulently appropriated" his party's votes.
LDPR leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky, who led the walkout, said, "We demand a meeting with President Medvedev." Also, head of the Communist Party, Gennady Zyuganov, said his members would boycott the Duma until they were granted a meeting with the President. The Communists said they were also considering a Supreme Court appeal. "What's the point in having a legal system and laws if they only suit one party?"Vadim Solovyov, a Communist Party MP said. "Putin's system of government makes no sense and it simply doesn't work." Solovyov also said Russia's political situation had "fallen to a new low". At least during the Yeltsin era we kept some Soviet systems that worked. But with Putin, it's pointless and Russia's the worst it has been", he said.
Mr Putin dismissed the protests, saying: "Those who don't win are never happy." Russia's Central Election Commission chief Vladimir Churov, commenting on the surprise walkout, only said: "No comment. It is just politics." Churov has already called complaints about the elections as "improper hysteria."