By Athman Amran
Events of the past couple of months raise more questions than answers as to the alternatives Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka has in his quest for the presidency in the General Election.
Events of the past couple of months raise more questions than answers as to the alternatives Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka has in his quest for the presidency in the General Election.
For example, has the falling out between Deputy Prime Minister
Musalia Mudavadi and Prime Minister Raila Odinga made the key members of the G7
Alliance, Deputy Prime Minister Uhuru Kenyatta and Eldoret North MP William
Ruto, change their plan on a possible compromise candidate – perceived to have
been the VP – if the International Criminal Court locks them out of the
presidential race?
And was the luncheon between Kalonzo and Justice minister Eugene
Wamalwa a sign that the two have realised that with Mudavadi in the picture
they are no longer of any political significance to Uhuru and Ruto, who command
a huge following in Central and the Rift Valley?
And is President Kibaki also seeing Mudavadi
as an alternative presidential candidate if Uhuru and Ruto are out of the
picture?
This perception is enhanced by the move by the President to choose
Mudavadi to take the VP’s place to welcome him to address the nation during
Madaraka Day celebrations at the Nyayo National Stadium, Nairobi, on June 1.
Kalonzo and Raila were out of the country during the Madaraka Day
celebrations. Last Thursday, the President also sent Mudavadi to represent him
during the celebration of the Fifth World Accreditation Day at the Kenyatta
International Conference Centre.
Political analyst and lecturer at the University of Nairobi, Adams
Oloo says the entry of the Sabatia MP changes the equation in the G7 Alliance.
“The entry of Mudavadi means that the sidelining of Kalonzo is
complete,” Dr Oloo says, adding that by leaving ODM, it means the DPM can now
be a compromise candidate if Uhuru and Ruto are locked out of the presidential
race by their trial in The Hague. He said Kalonzo must have realised that he is
no longer “number one” in the G7 Alliance.
“Wamalwa was also made to believe he was the G7 pointman in
Western. But with the entry of Mudavadi, he is now supposed to take a back
seat,” Oloo adds.
He said one of the options for Kalonzo and Eugene is to form a
force that would work with them.
But he feels the two cannot stick together because the Justice
minister may soon realise that by working with the VP, he would be fighting
Mudavadi, Sirisia MP and Ford-Kenya leader Moses Wetangula and ODM, which means
he would be suffocated of support in Western and Nyanza.
“I see Wamalwa working with Ford-Kenya or ODM. He has to go where
the Luhya support,” he said.
And for Kalonzo, Oloo says the VP could look for alliances, but
not in ODM. Macharia Munene of the United States International
University-Africa said it was obvious the two leaders are being brought
together by a common goal after apparently being sidelined by the G7 Alliance.
Prof Macharia does not dismiss an alliance between the two who he said seem to
have been ignored by the main players in the G7 Alliance.
And whether the two can make a winning team in the elections,
Munene says, “There is always a possibility if they come up with a winning
formula.”
But Francis Mwangangi, the chairman of the Wiper party in Yatta
constituency, interprets the VP’s overtures to political leaders from other parts
of the country as part of an on-going peace-making mission by Kalonzo towards
national healing and peaceful elections.
“Besides seeking to win the
presidential poll with a simple majority, the VP has an eye beyond the
elections, mainly to ensure a democratic exercise and a peaceful country.
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