KENYA is hurtling towards a critical juncture as 23 pending by-elections are
likely to reshape the balance of power and define the trajectory of the 2027
general elections.
What would otherwise be routine electoral exercises has now snowballed into
a full-blown political showdown, with the country's top political figures
eyeing them as a litmus test for their influence, popularity, and strategic
alignments.
The Independent Electoral and Boundaries
Commission has already confirmed it will conduct the by-elections once it
receives the requisite writs from the speakers of the National Assembly and
Senate.
The commission, in a statement last week, said: “We will discuss this matter
with the speakers of the respective Houses of Parliament. Once we receive the
respective writs, IEBC will expeditiously hold the by-elections.”
Among the 23 contested seats are seven in
Parliament—six in the National Assembly and one in the Senate—and 16 in the
county assemblies.
The vacant parliamentary seats include Baringo county (Senate), Magarini
(Kilifi), Banissa (Mandera), Ugunja (Siaya), Malava (Kakamega), Mbeere North
(Embu), and Kasipul (Homa Bay).
At ward level, the contests will be held in
Angata Nanyokie (Kajiado), Chewani (Tana River), Fafi (Garissa), Kisa East
(Kakamega), Lake Zone (Turkana), Mumbuni (Machakos), Narok Town (Narok), and
Nyamaiya and Nyansiongo (Nyamira), among others.
While the by-elections span the geographical
breadth of Kenya, their political implications transcend regional borders.
They have become a battleground for President William Ruto’s UDA, a united
opposition coalescing around Kalonzo Musyoka (Wiper) and former Deputy
President Rigathi Gachagua, and Raila Odinga’s ODM.
“The by-elections will tell us whether the ground is shifting for real or it’s
just political noise. They are a preview of 2027 and every major player is
keenly watching,” said Machakos Deputy Governor Francis Mwangangi in an
interview.
Kakamega Deputy Governor Ayub Savula shares
this view. “These are not just routine contests—they’re political barometers.
The outcome will have 100 per cent bearing on 2027,” he told the Star.
“If UDA loses in the by-elections, it signals they might perform dismally in
the general elections. And the same goes for the opposition.”
With the political temperature rising, all
sides are sharpening their ground game. President Ruto’s UDA, under growing
internal pressure and grappling with a public fallout with Gachagua, sees the
mini polls as an opportunity to reaffirm its dominance.
Ruto’s estranged former deputy, Gachagua, has
joined forces with Kalonzo, Martha Karua, Eugene Wamalwa, and former National
Assembly Speaker Justin Muturi under a nascent anti-Ruto coalition.
The group has coalesced around a singular mission: to render Ruto a one-term
President. For Gachagua, these by-elections are a chance to demonstrate that
his influence goes beyond Mount Kenya.
But some within the opposition warn that his abrasive and ethnically-tinged
style may be a liability rather than an asset.
Savula was blunt: “If Gachagua campaigns in Western’s Malava, the opposition
will lose because of that tribal tag. His brand of politics can only make sense
in the mountain.”
Raila Odinga faces a critical test. While seen
to have aligned himself with Ruto in recent months—an alliance that has drawn
criticism from some ODM supporters—Raila must now prove that he still commands
significant sway in his traditional bastions of Nyanza, Coast and Western
Kenya.
“The by-elections will show whether Raila’s
influence is intact or eroding,” Mwangangi said. “If ODM wins across its
strongholds, then he can say his base remains loyal despite the handshake with
Ruto.”
Indeed, the contests in places like Magarini
(Kilifi), Kasipul (Homa Bay), Ugunja (Siaya), and Nyamaiya (Nyamira) will offer
insights into whether ODM still reigns supreme in Coast, Luo and Kisii regions
or whether internal rumblings are translating into voter backlash.
Meanwhile, the Mbeere North seat in Embu, vacant
after Godfrey Ruku’s elevation to the Cabinet, is shaping up to be a microcosm
of the larger Gachagua-Ruto battle for Mount Kenya’s political soul.
Both camps are likely to pump in significant resources, hoping to send a
symbolic message to the region’s electorate ahead of 2027.
Ruto and Raila, reportedly working closely
behind the scenes, appear to have tactically zoned regions to prevent
cannibalism of their support base.
ODM is expected to field candidates in Nyanza, Coast, and parts of
Western, while UDA will concentrate on Rift Valley, North Eastern, and the
restive Mt Kenya region.
In Malava, the President has deployed Prime
Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi to lead the charge in reclaiming the seat
formerly held by ANC’s Malulu Injendi, who passed away recently.
Mudavadi, once the face of ANC, now operates under the UDA umbrella and is
working hard to consolidate his backyard.
On Thursday, Mudavadi he over 100 elders and
clan chairpersons from the 29 Kabras clans to solidify support.
“Until you elect a new Member of Parliament, I stand as your patron in
Malava. We must move forward together, build on the strong foundation left by
our late brother Hon Malulu Injendi, and ensure that the development agenda
remains on course,” he said.
Beyond party politics, the by-elections could
also alter the internal power dynamics within Kenya Kwanza and the opposition.
A surprise win by an opposition-affiliated candidate in a UDA zone—or vice
versa—would embolden internal dissenters and force reevaluations of current
strategies.
“There’s a growing list of leaders charting
their own paths. These by-elections might give them the confidence to defy
party lines,” Mwangangi said.
Even if one side sweeps the board, Mwangangi
warned against complacency. “Victory in the by-elections doesn’t guarantee a
win in 2027. It’s just an early indicator. Whoever loses must use it to regroup
and adjust their game plan.”
As campaigns intensify, political watchers
will be keen to see which alliances hold, which ones crack, and which new
formations emerge.
For now, Kenya’s political chessboard is being reset—not in 2027—but right
here in these decisive, localised battles. The stakes couldn’t be higher.