Youth lobby submits KSh 300 billion employment petition to Parliament

A youth lobby has petitioned Parliament to create a KSh 300 billion supplementary budget for the 2026/27 financial year to tackle youth unemployment.

The petition was presented to Funyula MP Wilberforce Oundo by the Youth and Young Aspirants League of the United Green Movement Party on June 25, 2026. It proposes measures starting July 2026 under the Social Protection sector.

The proposed budget includes KSh 168 billion for monthly KSh 7,000 payments to two million unskilled youth, KSh 60 billion for business grants, and KSh 36 billion for skills training. Petitioners also seek a national register of unemployed graduates.

The petition was submitted on the second anniversary of the 2024 Gen Z protests and is undersigned by former Chief Justice David Maraga. It follows President William Ruto signing the Finance Bill 2026 into law.

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Kenyan MPs voting on the Finance Bill 2026 in the National Assembly chamber.
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National Assembly passes Finance Bill 2026

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The National Assembly has passed the Finance Bill 2026 after a third reading vote, sending it to President William Ruto for assent.

Youth in the country benefited the most in the 2026/2027 fiscal year budget presented by Finance Minister John Mbadi.

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As the public comment period for the Finance Bill 2026 neared its end on Monday evening, Kenyan youth turned to social media to analyze proposed taxes.

Kenya's National Assembly has called for public submissions on the Finance Bill 2026, which proposes new taxes on mobile phones, imported second-hand clothes and digital assets.

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Hundreds of youths in Kisii County protested on Tuesday night over delayed and reduced payments from the NYOTA programme. They received only Ksh300 instead of the promised Ksh1,000 daily stipend. The protesters spent the night at a primary school, vowing to continue until their demands are met.

Activists have urged the KNCHR to ensure transparency in compensating victims of the 2024 and 2025 Gen Z protests. They propose extending data collection from 60 to 90 days and warn against political interference. They argue the Sh2 billion budget is insufficient.

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Kenya's government has slashed funding for public universities by Ksh13 billion under the new funding model, according to data from the Kenya National Bureau of Statistics (KNBS). Leading institutions like JKUAT, University of Nairobi and Egerton have been hardest hit, with sharp drops in government capitation between the 2023/2024 and 2025/2026 financial years. The data emerges four months before the September university intake.

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