KENYANS VOTE TODAY AND I'LL LEAVE THECOLI IF KENYATTA LOSES!

thatrapsfan

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Initial Thoughts on the Reelection of President Uhuru Kenyatta



11 August 2017


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Congratulations to President Uhuru Kenyatta on reelection. In the end, he outperformed the polls by having a well-oiled national campaign that paid close attention to down ballot races. Jubilee MPs, Governors, Senators, and MCAs were elected in Bungoma, Kakamega, and other key swing areas. Where the party won it won big; and in the places it lost, it stayed competitive. The same cannot be said for NASA-affiliates.
kenyatta.jpeg



The polls were not that off. Kenyatta led in all but one poll conducted by Infotrak. In the end it appears that the undecideds stayed home. Turnout was relatively lower in Western and Coast regions (to regions with the biggest share of undecideds) relative to the national average. Odinga needed to at least match Kenyatta’s stronghold turnout in these regions to stay competitive.


Of the two models that I ran, the one incorporation registration rate as a measure of voter enthusiasm did better that the one that only considered historical turnout rates by region. Kenyatta supporters registered at high rates and followed through on Tuesday. Undecided Odinga supporters stayed home on Tuesday.


In a model that gives less weight to registration rates (as proxies for voter enthusiasm and likely turnout), the estimated vote share is Kenyatta 52.8% vs Odinga 47.2%.


A more involved model that tries to estimate differential voter enthusiasm yields an even bigger advantage for Kenyatta (54% vs 46%).


Turnout in 2013 was most certainly inflated by both CORD and the Jubilee Alliance.


Whatever one thinks of him, William Ruto is a political genius. After Tuesday has emerged as arguably the most powerful politician in Kenya. Initially I had thought that Jubilee Party was a bad idea that would end up depressing turnout by forcing everyone to vote for the same candidates. In the end it did not matter. Instead, Jubilee won big in the presidential election and, perhaps more importantly, swept key down ballot races. The party will command at least 49% of the seats in the 12 Parliament and will most certainly hit more than 50% with the support of friendly independents. Ruto has successfully vanquished the Moi family in Rift Valley politics. And more importantly, he is slowly emerging to be a national politician with a strong direct following outside of his core base. Only Odinga has managed to achieve this feat in the recent past.


Chances are very high that William Ruto will be the 5th President of Kenya. I must admit to have been wrong in assuming that his political stock would plummet as soon as Kenyatta won reelection. Instead, I think because of his hold on Jubilee his stock will only rise with time. Kenyatta’s elite base cannot push him aside. He has the numbers in Parliament and the very credible threat of inflicting maximum pain by raising political temperatures in the Rift Valley.


This will be a tough loss for Odinga supporters. At 72, this was surely his last stab at the presidency. There will be a lot to be said about the organization and strategy of his campaign — including the apparent lack of polling agents, failure to try and raid Jubilee strongholds, and own goal regarding the prospects of violence following a rigged election (the latter may have cost Evans Kidero the Nairobi governorship). There is also the issue of IEBC’s inability to relay results with the confidence of all parties concerned. However, despite the possibility of hacking of the results transmission system, the down ballot results point to a credible Kenyatta win. Unless more evidence becomes public, I am inclined to believe that this election was credible. The KIEMS system worked. IEBC should build on this success to strengthen the transmission system. It was messy, yes. But it was also most certainly better than last time.


This is a step forward in Kenya’s political development. The opposition is in disarray, but the real institutional fights are about to start within the Jubilee coalition. Ruto’s 2022 ambitions will likely force him to expand the size of the Jubilee coalition. He will likely reach out to Odinga’s base — including in Coast, Nyanza, Eastern, and Western regions. Kenyatta will also want to give himself some credible check on Ruto’s power and influence, which will force him to reach outside of Jubilee’s core constituency for institutional support. Recall that Jubilee is now pretty much Ruto’s party. It will be interesting to see how Joho, Nyong’o, Ngilu, and Oparanya react to all this.


I expect Kenyatta to be constrained by intra-Jubilee politics in his second term. I will say more on the likely political and policy direction of the second term after Kenyatta announces his new cabinet.


In the next fortnight I’ll probably put together a piece on the historical and political significance of Odinga’s likely exit from the political stage.


Hon. Raila Amolo Odinga is perhaps the one individual who has contributed the most to democratic consolidation in Kenya since the early 1990s. He is also a tragic figure who has had to deal with personal shortcomings, family tragedy, and systemic rejection by Kenya’s powers that be — all played out in full view of the Kenyan public. In addition, it is impossible to talk about Odinga without mentioning the ethnic factor. I think that the biggest impact of this loss will be the Kenyanization of the Luo elite. Since Odinga Senior, the Luo elite have invested a lot in trying to change Kenya (at great expense for the Luo masses) — a fact that made Luo Nyanza the perennial epicenter of oppositionist politics. But with Odinga’s exit, this collective commitment to oppositionist politics will likely diminish. I expect Luo Nyanza politics to become more fragmented and transactional (i.e. less purist). All else considered, the Kenyanization of the Luo elite will probably be a good thing for the masses in Luo Nyanza.
 

Robbie3000

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Extremely pedestrian analysis. The overwhelming majority of us have accepted Ruto as our President in 2022.

:comeon: I'm not even that familiar with Kenyan politics, but I know a Kalenjin is never seeing the presidency if Kikuyus have anything to say about it.

:mjlol:
 

thekyuke

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:comeon: I'm not even that familiar with Kenyan politics, but I know a Kalenjin is never seeing the presidency if Kikuyus have anything to say about it.

:mjlol:

Son,you're young. Don't speak with authority on shyt you know nothing about! I'm telling you as a Kikuyu the deal has been made with us UK and Ruto for 2022.
 

thekyuke

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IEBC just declared UK president!


IEBC declares Uhuru Kenyatta as the new President Elect | Mombasa County News | Baraka FM 95.5 FM

Nairobi, KENYA: IEBC chairman Wafula Chebukati has declared President Uhuru Kenyatta as the new president elect in the just concluded 2017 general elections.

Speaking at the Bomas Of Kenya on Friday evening Chebukati said Kenyatta got 8,203,290 (54.27% ) 35 (counties attained at least 25% )votes against his competitor Raila Odinga who got 6,762,224 (( 44.74%) 29 counties attained 35%).


ANOTHER DESERVED 5 YEARS FOR A PASSIONATE AND PRODUCING PRESIDENT !

I told mofos,didn't I?!
 

Trajan

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Frankincense and Myrrh
:heh: Garissa/Wajir/Mandera brehs dont want to leave Kenya.

At the moment.

But things change. People weigh up their options and move accordingly.

After all they did fight a 4 year war to join Somalia. Also things are not hunky dory over there....NFD Somalis always complain of discrimination. The Kenyan army periodically carries out pogroms there.

Seems a long shot now, but if the tables were to turn and Somalia became peaceful/booming then best believe NFD breeds would want to join.

Having said that, they might just want to have their cake and eat it like Somali citizens of other countries :beli:
 

thatrapsfan

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At the moment.

But things change. People weigh up their options and move accordingly.

After all they did fight a 4 year war to join Somalia. Also things are not hunky dory over there....NFD Somalis always complain of discrimination. The Kenyan army periodically carries out pogroms there.

Seems a long shot now, but if the tables were to turn and Somalia became peaceful/booming then best believe NFD breeds would want to join.

Having said that, they might just want to have their cake and eat it like Somali citizens of other countries :beli:
That was a different world ago breh before the Berlin Wall fell, before Kenya had multiparty elections, before Somali collapsed etc The perceptions and feelings of Kenyan Somalis are not anywhere near the same anymore and even though the NEP is still poor none the story there isn't as black or white as some brehs would tell it. Devolution is moving along slowly but it's leading to more political participation in Kenyan elections for Somalis not less and in ways that defy how things usually worked ( look at Mandera results in this election where people re-elected governor despite clan elders not endorsing him)

Even at an anecdotal level I've never met a single Kenyan Somali who was sympathetic to some sort of secession. I think the trend will continue along this direction and that era will seem more ancient. In any case it's not a right or wrong answer, and it's ok for people of the same ethnicity to be citizens of different countries.

I do take your point on them wanting to have their cake and eat it that's definitely true but just Somali resourcesfulness at work lol. A lot of Kenyan Somalis working for NGOS and in other capacities in Somalia because the opportunity was there.
 

Ill Lou Malnati

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When I heard about this on NPR yesterday and saw the news alert this morning, I immediately thought of this thread. :laugh:
 
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