Opinion

Uhuru visit to Raila a first act in a tricky play

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By MAKAU MUTUA
Posted  Saturday, August 21  2010 at  18:54

In Summary

  • I think the deputy PM has something up his sleeve and the gesture is the first act of a long and tricky play

Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta’s dramatic – if highly symbolic – visit to Prime Minister Raila Odinga at his Karen home last week has left the tongues of mere mortals wagging loosely.

Does the son of Jomo know something we don’t? My crystal ball tells me that he has something up his sleeve, and the visit is only the first act of a very long and tricky play.

When the progeny of the two most famous political dynasties in the country retreat for a “secret” detente, you would be foolish not to smell a rat.

The only challenge is to identify the schemer and the schemed. Who, between Mr Odinga and Mr Kenyatta, is the more cunning?

There is more than meets the eye here. But let me first dispense with an implausible theory.

The lame explanation is that Mr Kenyatta was paying Mr Odinga a long delayed visit since the surgery on the latter’s head.

Sounds cute, but doesn’t quite cut it. Otherwise, how do you explain the family entourage complete with “sacrificial” sheep?

Peace offering

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Perhaps it was a “peace offering”. May be Mr Kenyatta came to take a measure of Mr Odinga, and size up his opponent.

The inescapable fact is that the visit took place at the most pivotal moment in the country’s history since 1964. Their fathers launched the First Republic together.

Could the sons launch the Second Republic together?

I have several tantalising hypotheses. Perhaps Mr Kenyatta has concluded that Mr Odinga is unbeatable in 2012. If so, Mr Kenyatta would be wise to seek to be Mr Odinga’s running mate, and become Vice-President under Mr Odinga.

This would flip the positions of their parents in 1964 when Jaramogi was Jomo’s deputy. Mr Kenyatta could go into “political oblivion” if he’s not Mr Odinga’s deputy because there is no other “commanding” position in the new constitution.

If this is right, Mr Kenyatta came on a “bended knee” to pledge loyalty to Mr Odinga. Mr Kenyatta must have come to say “Raila Tosha”. What thinkest thou?

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Add a comment (36 comments so far)

  1. Submitted by Pende

    Before Infotrack go to the press to declare the pollsters for 2012 outcome of the famous presidential elections, they should make sure that all the citizens of Kenya have the understanding of civic education, especially democratic education, which should, involve both formal settings (schools) and informal settings (families, communities, libraries, houses of worship, workplaces, civic organizations, unions, sports teams, campaigns and elections, mass media, and so on). AND THEN RUN BACK TO NAIROBI to give their data collection and evidence. Otherwise, polls without the input of the rural voters desperate for the new Kenya to deliver are biased.

    Posted  August 23, 2010 10:59 PM  
  2. Submitted by petero65

    Keep on dreaming.

    Posted  August 23, 2010 07:04 PM  
  3. Submitted by mzee_moja

    Raila/Uhuru is an unbeatable coallision. However Raila might fire Uhuru before six months in office. So watch out Mr UK. Raila's merger is never to be trusted, ask MOI.

    Posted  August 23, 2010 05:34 PM  
  4. Submitted by yesuwangu

    We need Musalia Mudavadi,as the deputy for Raila he is better when it comes to working.If Uhuru want to Join Raila they should that uhuru be Given the Next Prime minister and sally Kosgei and charity Ngilu to be deputy prime ministers

    Posted  August 23, 2010 05:34 PM  
  5. Submitted by vgogero

    Alliances should be formed after elections But with the 51% rule for the winning candidate then some form of alliances is necessary since none of the candidates can garner the necessary 50% + 1

    Posted  August 23, 2010 05:32 PM  

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