The latest propaganda being pushed around UDA and 2027 is very simple.
They want Kenyans to believe that the election is already gone, that Ruto will rig, that voting will not matter, that registration is useless and that the people should enter 2027 already defeated in their minds.
That is why you are seeing this “they will rig” line being sponsored and amplified everywhere, including by sections of the media that have become very friendly to this regime.
NTV itself has carried the framing of UDA leaders allegedly plotting to rig 2027, showing how loud this narrative has become in public conversation.
To be honest, the optics of serious, countrywide rigging are too heavy for this regime.
This is a government that cannot repair potholes, cannot manage fuel prices, cannot manage schools, cannot manage hospitals, cannot manage salaries, cannot even explain simple taxes without creating anger.
You really believe the same confused regime has the intelligence, discipline, secrecy and technical sophistication to manage a clean nationwide rigging operation without being caught?
Rigging a presidential election is not like bribing a few brokers in a hotel or manipulating a small party nomination. A national election has agents, polling stations, forms, constituency tallying centres, observers, media, screenshots, live streams, parallel tallies and millions of angry citizens watching every number. The moment Kenyans realize even one vote does not tally, this country will enter a crisis bigger than anything this regime can control.
That is why I believe this “he will rig anyway” chorus is not just a warning.
It is psychological warfare meant to kill voter registration, kill turnout and create apathy. It is also meant to make young people say, “Why vote if they will steal it?” That is exactly where they want you mentally.
The real answer is not to stay home but massive registration, massive turnout, agents in every polling station, parallel tallying, civic vigilance and zero fear.
Elections are not stolen from people who are awake, organized and watching every vote. Elections are stolen from people who were discouraged before the first ballot was even cast.
So don’t fall for the propaganda. The vote still matters, registration matters, turnout mattes and polling station vigilance matters.
The biggest threat to Ruto’s second term is a united opposition.
There is propaganda that Ruto will simply rig his way back, but rigging is not as easy as people make it sound. Rigging requires serious intelligence, serious coordination, serious logistics and a disciplined political machine, and Kenya Kwanza may be loud, arrogant and aggressive, but that does not mean they have the capacity to quietly manage every moving part of an election without exposing themselves to a bigger crisis.
The bigger danger for Ruto is the possibility of a last minute national mood swing where Kenyans wake up close to the election and decide in large numbers that Ruto must go. That is the counterattack I am talking about. Not chaos, not violence and not online excitement, but millions of ordinary Kenyans making a quiet decision in their homes, villages, towns, churches, markets, workplaces and polling stations that enough is enough. When people are divided, confused or hopeless, power can manipulate them, but when many Kenyans arrive at the same conclusion at the same time, the system starts shaking.
Personally, my worry is bigger than Ruto. It is bigger than Kalonzo and bigger than whoever else imagines they can inherit power. Whether the next president is Ruto, Kalonzo, Kuku or anyone else, things will still be bad if the poisoned system remains untouched. The country is not well. People are broke, businesses are closing, families that were stable two or three years ago are now struggling, rent is choking people, food is expensive, school fees is a nightmare, jobs are scarce and hope itself has become expensive.
This is where the opposition is also failing because they are talking politics but they are not seriously addressing the issues affecting Kenyans. Kenyans do not just need a replacement for Ruto. They need a serious plan for the economy, taxation, public debt, corruption, police brutality, unemployment, healthcare, education and the cost of living. Without that, removing one group and replacing it with another will only change the names of the people eating while the country continues bleeding.
As I have always said, only Kenyans themselves will take back this country, rectify it and set serious systems. Not politicians, not tribal kingpins and not fake reformers who become silent immediately they get appointments. Keen people know that time must come, and it may come slowly then suddenly.
No matter who is at the top, Kenyans will eventually realise that the system itself is poisoned, and once that realisation becomes national, it will be very bad for anyone who takes over. Kenyans will not just be asking for a new president. They will be demanding a country that finally works.
@bevalynekwambo3 Proliferation of eucalyptus trees is exacerbating the drying of natural springs, as these trees consume large amounts of water. Climate change, combined with eucalyptus, intensifies water scarcity and threatens local ecosystems more especially in kisii and nyamira
@SteveNjiru@Ohta_Ryota A president issuing employment letters to MPs undermines institutional hiring processes and fairness. If the TSC allows this, it raises concerns about its independence. Such practices disadvantage long-time graduates without political connections.
@bevalynekwambo3 Proliferation of eucalyptus trees is exacerbating the drying of natural springs, as these trees consume large amounts of water. Climate change, combined with eucalyptus, intensifies water scarcity and threatens local ecosystems more especially in kisii and nyamira
@ahmednasirlaw Meanwhile a person who was severely assaulted and lost a tooth has been neglected by law enforcement and legal authorities. Despite clear evidence, the police and prosecution have dismissed the case, revealing a troubling failure in our justice system.
Management and prevention of _Ipomea hildebrandtii_ in Oldonyiro area in Isiolo county, Kenya is now a priority. Call foe a management solution to this increaser plant species.
It has become extremely abundant on some rangelands possibly as a result of overgrazing .
#Ipomea
Management and prevention of _Ipomea hildebrandtii_ in Oldonyiro area in Isiolo county, Kenya is now a priority. Call foe a management solution to this increaser plant species.
It has become extremely abundant on some rangelands possibly as a result of overgrazing .
#Ipomea
@Hot_96Kenya Low-Carbon Farming Practices: Implementing low-carbon farming practices, such as precision agriculture, agroecology, and organic farming, can help minimize emissions from synthetic fertilizers, livestock, and energy use in agriculture.