What was meant to be genuine war against graft may have been neutralised following blame games between Raila Odinga's foot-soldiers and the camp backing DP William Ruto.
Last week, President Uhuru Kenyatta went ballistic on people perceived to be looters, ordering lifestyle audit which has not gone well with Ruto's camp.
"We must know how everyone amassed what he has. Lifestyle audit must be carried out including me and all public servants," he said.
His remarks have elicited sharp debate with Ruto's camp demanding that the president's family also be subjected to the audit.
But former Kitutu Masaba MP Timothy Bosire led attacks against Ruto's camp, insisting that they should be ready for lifestyle audit.
"You cannot run away from the audit if you are clean. Ruto and the team should not fear. If they are genuine with the war, let them support the DP," he said.
Nyamira County ODM chair Richard Kaka added on Sunday: "You cannot start blame games if you are genuine. Let Ruto come out and face scrutiny."
But a camp allied to the DP has opposed the audit, insisting that it could be a wider scheme to portray the DP as a corrupt fellow.
"The war must be genuine. When we talk of audit without proper mechanisms them we are missing the point. Let us not pretend to be fighting graft," said Borabu politician Patrick Osero.
This comes after a section of Rift Valley MPs accused unnamed individuals in Uhuru's 'kitchen cabinet' of targeting Ruto by probing departments headed by his allies.