Odinga wants to bring back ‘imperial presidency’, says Rut
The presidential candidate launched a
thinly-veiled swipe at President Uhuru Kenyatta’s endorsement of long-term
rival Raila Odinga, who will face Ruto on 9 August.
Kenyan presidential candidate and Deputy President William Ruto
has labelled the political system a ‘mongrel’ after President Uhuru Kenyatta
endorsed long-term rival Raila Odinga for president. Speaking at Chatham House
in London, Ruto, who has served as Kenyatta’s deputy president since 2013,
argued that there must be “clear demarcation” between opposition and government
and said that the government is “blurring the lines” following Kenyatta’s Odinga
endorsement.
“The result you see today in Kenya is there is no government and
no opposition, you have a mongrel of a governance system… The leader of the
opposition [Odinga] is a project of the system and the deep state of
government… the leader of what is supposed to be the ruling party [Kenyatta] is
actually a supporter or refugee in the opposition party,” he said.
Ruto will lead his United Democratic Alliance into the polls on
9 August after Kenyatta publicly endorsed long-time rival Raila Odinga on
23 February after years of tension with his deputy. In a sideswipe at
the endorsement, Ruto dismissed suggestions that he needs Kenyatta’s support to
win the election.
‘’The question I am often asked is how will you succeed in your
presidential campaign unless you have the support of Uhuru Kenyatta or the next
guy, oblivious of that fact we have built the largest political party.”
Ruto said that he had been frozen out of decision making during
Kenyatta’s second term, claiming that he helped push through important projects
in the first term such as the Standard Gauge Railway and the expansion
of the road network. He said that SME support, agricultural reform and
“democratising the economy” would be at the heart of his offering to
voters.
‘Imperial presidency’
Ruto said that if elected his priority would be to complete the
implementation of the “progressive” 2010 constitution, which he said would
bring checks and balances to the governing system. Ruto was the lead spokesman
for the ‘No’ side in the 2010 referendum on implementing the constitution, but
has since come to support it.
“On the other side we have our competitors who have doubts about
our 2010 constitution and have proposed in the region of 72 different
amendments in the BBI process [Building Bridges Initiative, a dialogue between
Kenyatta and Odinga].
“They want to bring back an imperial presidency, they want more
power given to the president, they want the president to have power over the
judiciary, they want an entity called an ombudsman to supervise and superintend
the judiciary.
“They want the president to go back to appointing ministers from
Parliament, which in our opinion undermines the oversight responsibility of
Parliament,” he claimed.
Memories of previous presidential contests have raised fears of
a disputed result or the possibility of violence in August. In 2017, the
Supreme Court ordered a re-run after Odinga contested Kenyatta’s victory.
Odinga ultimately boycotted the rerun, handing Kenyatta a landslide victory. Ruto
pledged that the upcoming election would be free and fair, provided that the
Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) is “properly resourced.”
He insisted he would accept the outcome of the election “whichever way it goes”
“A lot has been said about that election, I want to commit on
this platform that we will work and deploy every resource within our ability to
make sure the election is free, fair and peaceful. We have confidence in the
Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission that they can deliver a
credible election if they are properly resourced, supported both by government
and our development partners and friends, as has been the tradition of support
to IEBC.”
Ruto
strongly opposed the Political Parties
Amendment Bill, which was signed into law in January and is widely
seen as favouring Odinga’s chances in the August contest.