Former Prime Minister Raila
Odinga famed for years of human
rights champions now finds himself
at crossroads even before the ink
dries in his new political deal with
President William Ruto.
The veteran opposition chief,
who has built his legacy on fighting
against oppressive governments and
championing democracy, now finds
himself in a tight corner.
Some of his ardent supporters are
silently wondering about the new
move to work with the government
that, in their opinion, represents
everything Raila has fought in his
political career.
His anti-establishment politics has
endeared him to the masses and as a
result, he has earned a near fanatical
following across the country.
Many believe aligning with the
government risks eroding his moral
authority and political standing.
President Ruto’s two-year
administration has been accused
of amongst others, abductions of
critics, human rights violations and
suppression of dissenting opinions.
State-funded Kenya National
Commission on Human Rights put
the total number of abductions at 82
youth since June last year, with 29
yet to be traced by December 2024.
While the 80-year-old is no stranger
to political reinvention, the baggage
of the current association now makes
the new alliance far trickier to sell.
By agreeing to support Ruto, Raila
is now presented with two options.
He will either close his ears to
the ideals he has held for decades
and enjoy the trappings of power, or
engineer change within – which may
create cracks in the government.
The fear in Raila’s camp is that
the deal with Ruto might render the
opposition chief just another veteran swallowed by the system.
Raila’s loyalists sounded the alarm
before the deal was formalised, with
some telling him not to betray what
the party has stood for over the years.
Siaya governor James Orengo -
who has also been in the trenches
and battled on the streets during the
regimes of almost all five Presidents
– made a passionate appeal to Raila
and ODM to ‘go slow’.
“I have been around for some
time. I was there during Kenyatta,
Moi, Kibaki and Uhuru. I will still be
around. I would appeal to our people
to go slow on any political deal until
we thoroughly consult and agree on
a better way forward,” the governor
said.
Orengo spoke on March 1,
during the burial of the mother of
journalist Justus Ochieng’ in Siaya.
Firebrand ODM secretary general
Edwin Sifuna has also been reluctant
to endorse Raila’s move, citing the
excesses of the Kenya Kwanza
administration, which fly against
what ODM believes in.
In one his of fiery speeches, the
Nairobi senator highlighted the
continued abuse of human rights -
especially abductions - a matter he
said ODM will never be party to.
“President Ruto has proved that
he cannot take care of Kenyans,”
Sifuna said during a morning talk
show on Citizen TV.
However, the
Nairobi Senator appeared to have
finally embraced the Ruto-Raila deal.
Sifuna, who was present at the
offi cial signing of the power-sharing
deal, said he attended the event in his
capacity as ODM secretary general.
Former ODM director of political
affairs, Wafula Buke, opined that the
political settlement may come at a
higher cost for Raila and his Orange
party.
“Has it occurred to him that his
intended marriage with Ruto will
spell the end of ODM as a national
party and confine it to a Luo Nyanza Party?” Buke posed.
“Has it occurred to him that his
recent and ongoing actions could
motivate victims, survivors and kin
of people killed in his demonstrations
to demand for reparations from him
for using them in selfish pursuit of
his own interests?”
In the deal, Ruto handed ODM
a near-equal share of cabinet slots
and top government positions. These
will include Cabinet secretaries,
principal secretaries, parastatals and
ambassadorial jobs.
Currently Deborah Barasa, Eric
Muuga and Mutahi Kagwe head
the Health, Water and Agriculture
dockets respectively.
The recent sharing of committee
leadership in Parliament is part of the
coalition deal between the President
and the ODM boss.
The Orange party
has assumed leadership of at least seven committees in the new power
arrangement that saw lawmakers
allied to former Deputy President
Rigathi Gachagua shown the door.
Some of the MPs who were
proposed for committee leadership
include Sam Atandi (Budget and
Appropriation), Benard Shinali
(Trade), Irene Mayaka (Regional),
Ken Chonga (Labour) and James
Nyikal (Health).
In the Senate, Siaya Senator Oburu
Odinga is the new chair for the
Energy committee while his Migori
counterpart, Eddy Oketch, now
chairs Transport.
Other ODM Senators chairing
committees are Betty Montet
(Education), Mohammed Faki
(Lands) and Juma Boy (Trade).
The deal is a culmination of Raila’s
cross-country consultative meetings
that has seen him visit ODM bases.