Why the government has given Chief of governors’ elections a microscopic eye

County bosses were last evening frantically trying to reach a consensus on the new leadership of the Council of Governors (CoG) to avoid divisive elections.

Governor Josphat Nanok, who has served his one-term limit and is seeking re-election with at least four of his colleagues also jostling for the seat.

 

Mr Nanok, Mr Wycliffe Oparanya (Kakamega), Kisumu’s Anyang Nyong’o and Uasin Gishu’s Jackson Mandago are reported to have been asked by colleagues to agree among themselves who would succeed the incumbent to avoid a divisive poll.

The election to be held at Movenpick Hotel in Westlands, Nairobi, is being keenly watched by the national government for different reasons.

The leadership of non-combative chairpersons in the likes of Mr Nanok – elected on an ODM party ticket – has been a welcome relief to President Uhuru Kenyatta’s administration.

Ex-chairmen, former governors Isaac Ruto and Peter Munya, were combative and abrasive and openly criticised the government on different issues, especially those relating to devolution since 2013.

The two had mastered the art of political defiance. While defying the system has worked for others, it did not work for the two whose political careers were somehow brought to a halt in the August 8, 2017 elections.

But it was under Ruto and Munya, who is now Trade and Industrialisation Cabinet secretary, that the CoG became the formidable mouthpiece of the 47 governors; and it was able to successfully champion county and national agendas

It was at this time that also the council vindicated to the doubting Thomases that county bosses were a political force to reckon with as far as national issues were concerned.

“At this particular point no consensus has been reached. We are, however, going to take a bi-partisan approach on this matter because it is serious and concerns counties and we are ignoring party politics on this one,” a governor from Nyanza said.

 

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