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Don’t get excited! Winnie Odinga dismisses claims of division within ODM

“The purpose of a political party is to capture all power, and I believe ODM must field a candidate everywhere.”

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by BRIAN ORUTA

News14 December 2025 - 09:11
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In Summary


  • Winnie said the party remained united under its new leader Oburu Oginga and was focused on strengthening its national footprint rather than managing imagined factions.
  • “A party with over eight million registered voters—we are going to have disagreements, but that should not mean people get excited that ODM is falling apart.”
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EALA MP Winnie Odinga/FILE

Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) politician Winnie Odinga has dismissed claims of internal divisions within the party, insisting that competition and disagreement are normal in a large political organisation and should not be misinterpreted as a sign of collapse.

Speaking amid heightened political activity within ODM as leaders position themselves ahead of 2027, Winnie said the party remained united under its new leader Oburu Oginga and was focused on strengthening its national footprint rather than managing imagined factions.

“The purpose of a political party is to capture all power, and I believe ODM must field a candidate everywhere,” she said.

“That is the point of a political party and a democracy. Not everybody will think the same, people are going to compete and ODM needs to be competitive, and we are.”

Her remarks come against the backdrop of speculation that differing views among senior party figures could signal emerging rifts within the country’s main opposition party.

Winnie, however, argued that diversity of opinion was inevitable in a party with a massive following and should be viewed as a strength rather than a weakness.

She emphasised her personal and political loyalty to the ODM leader, describing Oburu not only as the head of the party but also as a central figure in her family life.

“The party leader (Oburu Oginga) is my uncle, I love him, he is the only father I have left,” Winnie said.

“There’s no day I will be in a faction and he is not there. He is the head of my family, and I am always with him, and that is the faction I belong to, if there are.”

Winnie dismissed suggestions that ODM was splintering, urging both supporters and critics to avoid drawing premature conclusions from internal debates and competitive politics.

“But the party is okay,” she said. “A party with over eight million registered voters—we are going to have disagreements, but that should not mean people get excited that ODM is falling apart.”

She credited her late father and former long-serving leader of the Orange party, Raila Odinga, popularly known as Baba, with building a resilient political movement capable of withstanding internal contestation without losing its ideological direction.

“Baba alijenga hii nyumba and nobody is leaving,” Winnie said.

“He taught us what to do. The only ones who leave are those who have a problem with what he taught us.”

Her comments underscore ODM’s message that internal competition does not equate to disunity, as the party continues to position itself as a dominant force in national politics.

Party insiders say the leadership is keen to project cohesion while encouraging broad participation, arguing that robust debate is consistent with democratic practice rather than evidence of fragmentation.

 

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