Senior Counsels James Orengo and Paul Muite have reacted after the United Kingdom Supreme Court ruled that Prime Minister Boris Johnson illegally suspended Parliament.
Johnson earlier this month advised the Queen to suspend or prorogue Parliament for five weeks, a move which could have seen the House resume sittings on October 14th.
However, on Tuesday, UK's highest court in the land ruled the decision as unlawful and therefore, null and void.
Orengo, the Senate Minority Leader and Siaya Senator, said the ruling set a precedent on how constitutional and parliamentary democracies should work.
"The decision of the United Kingdom Supreme Court is a lesson on how constitutional and parliamentary democracies should work. The concept of unlimited power or prerogative is frowned upon. 'The King hath no prerogative, but that which the law of the land allows him," the lawyer tweeted.
Senior Counsel Muite said Johnson, who is also the Leader of the Conservative Party and has served as PM for less than three months, should step aside having misguided Her Majesty the Queen.
"Resignation is the only honourable option," said the veteran lawyer and former Kikuyu Member of Parliament
According to the BBC, Johnson, who is currently attending the United Nations General Assembly in New York, USA, has said he "strongly disagrees" with the ruling but will "respect" it.