Kenya’s 2017 elections will be like none before. Here’s why.

By Nanjala Nyabola
July 10, 2017
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Devolution has demystified local power and emboldened voters to assert
themselves, leading to shocks all the way up the political pyramid.
President Uhuru Kenyatta (pictured) and his Jubilee coalition face a
strong challenge from the NASA alliance, led by Raila Odinga. Credit:
AMISOM/Ilyas Ahmed.

President Uhuru Kenyatta (pictured) and his Jubilee coalition face a
strong challenge from the NASA alliance, led by Raila Odinga. Credit:
AMISOM/Ilyas Ahmed.

Kenya’s 2017 elections are set to be the country’s most interesting
yet. The political landscape has shifted, and whatever else these
elections turn out to be – violent, peaceful, confusing − they are
going to a different kettle of fish to previous polls.

The most obvious reason for this is devolution. After the 2010
constitution was passed, Kenya restructured its political and
legislative units, breaking 8 massive provinces into 47 counties made
up of various wards. The national legislature was broken into two
branches, establishing the roles of senator and governor. And the
position of women’s representatives was created in each county to help
achieve the new constitution’s gender quotas.

These changes also affected how elections work. In 2007, Kenyans voted
at three levels: for a councillor, a member of parliament (MP), and a
president. On 8 August 2017, the electorate will vote at six: a member
of the county assembly (MCA), a women’s representative, an MP, a
senator, a governor, and a president.

This was also the case in 2013, but since then, it has become much
clearer how the different levels of government operate in relation to
one another. This means that some positions have become far more
attractive and therefore competitive. And this increased contestation
at the local level has undermined some of the typical tropes of Kenyan
politics such as tribalism and regionalism. Things have changed.

[Why so tense? Kenya’s high stake elections explained]
Kenya’s political pyramid

One can think of Kenya’s system of political operatives as operating
in a pyramid formation. At the bottom are local elders. One step up
are county assembly members, followed by members of parliament,
senators, and county governors. Above them are the ethnic kingpins.
These are powerful individuals that come together to at the highest
level to form national political alliances or coalitions that then
contest the elections. In the case of 2017, we have President Uhuru
Kenyatta and Deputy President William Ruto on one side as the
incumbents, with Raila Odinga, Kalonzo Musyoka and others on the
opposing side.

Typically, the role of local elders at the bottom rung has been to
marshal voters to back the right kingpin at the top. Much of campaign
spending goes towards cementing this local loyalty. Although
politicians themselves sometimes hand out cash at rallies, the really
important network has been low-level leaders giving out goodies in
less intense environments. It’s the chief calling a village meeting
and distributing bags of maize flour, or the women’s group leader
dishing out t-shirts at the chama meeting.

In prior elections, knowing which way local leaders were leaning gave
a good indication of how the overall vote in a specific region would
go. For politicians, spending enough money on these low-level actors
could usually guarantee a positive return at the ballot box.
Dismantling the pyramid

Not anymore it seems. Devolution has made local politics much more
intimately connected with voters’ day-to-day lives. Power has become
demystified, and this has inspired more people to challenge local
leadership when it has been deemed to fail. A record 14,525 candidates
are running for office in 2017, and low-level chiefs and elders can no
longer guarantee voters’ support for a particular party through the
traditional means.

In 2013, it was enough for a candidate who wanted to be elected to buy
a nomination certificate from their party and then hand out money at a
rally, safe in the knowledge that their “person on the ground” would
distribute campaign goodies to people to secure their votes. But with
a more discerning electorate who, through devolution, more closely see
how local power works, or doesn’t, these tactics are no longer as
effective.

This can also be seen in the way Kenyan voters have been rejecting the
notion of “six-piece voting”. This was a strategy employed by national
politicians in 2013 whereby they encouraged supporters to vote for the
same party across all six levels of government. This was most
beneficial to those candidates in the middle levels of the pyramid.
Rather than establishing independent political identities, candidates
for MCAs, MPs and senators could just provide money downwards to
foster low-level loyalty for the party, while trading off the
popularity of the national-level politicians above them.

When Odinga and Kenyatta have proposed six-piece voting in 2017,
however, they have been heckled and booed at their own rallies. People
don’t want to just vote blindly for the same party in all the boxes;
they want more say in what happens at the various levels.

We saw these new dynamics play out in the party primaries this April.
Despite significant attempts at mobilisation, voters rejected
incumbent MCAs, MPs and even governors who they believe have failed to
deliver. Several key allies of national politicians failed to win
their party’s nomination.

Many of these figures are now running instead as independents, meaning
that many ethnic groups have two or more powerful figures contesting
key constituencies. This divides these ethnic kingdoms and presents a
dilemma for political parties. On one hand, they need to appease
loyalists by putting the force of the party behind each of their
candidates; on the other, they need to court voters that support those
popular independents that have left the party.

To date, leaders have responded to this conundrum by inviting some
independent hopefuls to participate in party events, but this has led
to public, and sometimes violent, clashes between supporters of the
different candidates.
A new politics?

In 2017, voters are not just rejecting six-piece voting and exercising
their judgements over local candidates beyond party loyalty. They are
also being vocal and visible about it.

This is the first time in recent memory that we’re seeing national
political figures appear uncertain before their own supporters during
their own rallies. The sight of Kenyatta, a sitting president, being
heckled – not once, but fairly consistently during the election period
− is novel. That people at a Odinga rally would shout anything that
wasn’t a synonym for ndio baba (“yes father”) is unprecedented.

Of course, more things have changed in Kenyan politics since 2013 than
those examined here. But these changes, amongst others, have thrown a
significant measure of unpredictability into the landscape. Political
punditry in Kenya has always been fixated on the ethnic question, but
this time around, it’s not going to be that simple. Ethnic loyalty is
still important, but it is no longer absolute. Voters have changed,
politicians are adapting, and everything is getting a lot
more…interesting.


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