Despite his pledge to push for stability and less political fireworks, ODM leader Raila Odinga seems to be determined to take the country for another referendum.
At the prayer meeting on Thursday, Raila insisted that he is keen to see president Uhuru Kenyatta implementing his manifesto in his last term.
But at Mombasa on Friday, Raila insisted that referendum push was unstoppable adding that it is the only way the country can solve its traditional challenges.
"Nobody is going to stop us from ensuring that the laws are changed. We want a country where even minorities can be presidents," he said.
In his recent speeches, Uhuru has dismissed calls to have a referendum insisting that he is only keen to deliver his main agendas to the country, a move that had been supported earlier by Raila.
But Raila yet again took a swipe at Uhuru adding that the two had agreed to have constitutional changes.
"After signing an MOU, we agreed with Uhuru to give nine points each and then formed a committee to deliberate on issues among them referendum," he said.
Uhuru has in the recent weeks even warned DP William Ruto's allies against eliciting political debates.