Siaya senator James Orengo has denied having any knowledge about the details and content of the yet to be released Building Bridges Initiative (BBI) taskforce report.
The taskforce, picked by President Uhuru Kenyatta and ODM leader Raila Odinga after their 2018 truce has been compiling a report on the best solutions for Kenya's recurrent troubles.
This is after it concluded its visits to all the 47 counties where Kenyans were allowed to present their opinions, which the team is expected to soon release in a single document.
Orengo is among forces surrounding Raila who have been very confident that the task force will propose constitutional amendments through a referendum.
Defending his authoritative remarks that Kenyans should brace for the changes, the legislator based it on the 9 points that Raila and Uhuru vowed to address on March 9, 2018.
"I am not writing and I have not seen it. If you read the document that President Uhuru and Raila signed, it revolves around changes," he said on K24's Punchline show on Sunday night.
Orengo further rubbished claims that he and his colleagues pushing for the changes are imposing them on Kenyans, saying that they can reject or propose more changes on the proposal.
He added that the outcome of the entire opinion collection exercise is not predetermined.
Orengo stated that otherwise, Raila and Uhuru would have made their preferences known immediately after the truce, and would not have subjected the country to the long exercise.
"If it was predetermined, then going around the country and giving the report back to the country would have been unnecessary," he added.
BBI taskforce Vice-Chair Adams Oloo last week said that the team is doing its final touches on the report, before handing it over to the president and Raila.