YVONNE'S TAKE: Partiless parties of Kenya

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Fellow Kenyans, a new poll by TIFA has confirmed what many of us already suspected: loyalty to political parties is fast fading.
TIFA chart shows UDA, which swept into power in 2022, enjoying 38% support, is now down to 16% — a reduction by more than half! The same goes for ODM, once at 32%, now at 13%. The single largest category? “Undecided
or none” — at a whopping 43%.
Let that sink in: the biggest party in Kenya today is no party at all. If this is not the biggest repudiation of the political class we have seen in recent times, I don’t know what is!
I suspect this is about more than fatigue. It is the
aftermath of the 2024 and 2025 protests, the Gen-Z-led revolution in the
streets that demanded a different kind of politics. And when the top two
parties, once bitter rivals, joined hands to protect themselves from the very
people who put them in power, it sent a message: the lines we were asked to choose
between in 2022 were apparently illusions.
Today, leaders from both sides freely admit that their
manifestos were not that different after all. Well, if that’s true, then why
did we have to go through the most expensive, divisive exercise in our history
to choose between them?
Political parties are supposed to be ideological homes. In
the U.S., Republicans and Democrats have debated ideas for over 150 years. In
the U.K., Labour and Conservatives have clashed over the role of the state for
more than a century. In Europe, Social Democrats, Liberals, and Greens may form
coalitions, but their core beliefs remain distinct.
Here, our parties are not ideological homes. They are
special-purpose vehicles, built to get us to an election and discarded once the
political cargo is delivered. When they’re done with one driver, they find
another.
Yet, we fund them. Yes, our taxes pay these parties
millions of shillings every year through the Political Parties Fund — money
that is supposed to build strong, enduring institutions. What have we gotten in
return? Cross-carpeting, broken promises, and endless coalition dramas.
This 43% — the new “party of none” — is a warning sign. It
is a vote of no confidence in the entire political class. It says: Stop
treating us as numbers, as tribes, as cargo. Give us ideas, give us values,
give us something real to believe in.
Because if you don’t, we may just decide that your parties
no longer deserve the funding — or our votes.
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