Ahead of the visit, leaders in the Kenya Kwanza
administration have mobilised residents to turn up in large numbers, casting
the tour as a showcase of the government’s delivery record.
Lands CS Alice Wahome said the President
will commission and launch projects worth Sh27 billion, including affordable
housing units and modern markets.
“The President is coming to demonstrate what his government has done for the
people of Murang’a,” Wahome said. She spoke during a women's empowerment programme at Mbiri
Primary School in Kiharu. She also urged residents to maintain peace and
support the visit.
The development pitch is emerging as central to Ruto’s re-election strategy
as he seeks to turn the tide in the restive region.
Sports PS Elijah Mwangi has also highlighted youth-focused
investments, noting that Murang’a has benefited from two international-standard
stadiums with a capacity of 10,000 each.
The leaders, also including Woman Representative Betty
Maina and Communications Authority chairman Charles Karondo, defended the
government’s record and accused the opposition, led by DCP leader Gachagua, of incitement.
Ruto, on April 7, hosted a delegation of grassroots and political leaders from
Murang’a at State House, Nairobi, among them nominated Senator Veronica
Maina, nominated MP Sabina Chege (Jubilee), Wahome and PS Mwangi.
The meeting, attended by Deputy President Kithure
Kindiki, focused on development priorities, including infrastructure and
agricultural reforms in coffee, dairy and tea sectors—key economic pillars in
Mt Kenya.
But beyond the development agenda, the visit carries clear political
undertones.
Murang’a has emerged as one of the key
battlegrounds in the widening rift between Ruto and Gachagua, with the DCP
leader rallying support through his grassroots mobilisation campaigns and
criticism of the government.
“Murang’a is symbolic because it reflects the
broader struggle for Mt Kenya. Ruto is leaning on development delivery, while
Gachagua is tapping into regional identity and perceived grievances,” political
analyst Dennis Mwangi opines.
The region, long considered a cohesive voting
bloc, is increasingly fracturing into two main competing factions.
While a
majority of elected leaders remain aligned with the President, Gachagua is
tapping into new entrants to dislodge the incumbents through his “Operation Fagia”.
Gachagua visited Murang’a on Sunday in a tour widely seen as a pre-emptive
political move to consolidate his foothold in the area ahead of the President’s
tour.
During his stops, he de-campaigned area leaders backing the President, even
as he gave aspirants time and a microphone to campaign for themselves.
The back-to-back visits have also raised the stakes around turnout and
optics. Crowd sizes and public reception during the President’s tour are likely
to be closely compared to Gachagua’s earlier mobilisation, turning what is termed a development visit into a symbolic contest of political strength.
The DCP leader, however, urged residents of Murang’a to quietly listen to
the President without heckling so they can get the development that
belongs to them.
But he said Mt Kenya leaders, who will be accompanying the President, should
be shouted down, labelling them as traitors in the region.
During his other visits to the Mt Kenya region, the President has also flashed
the development card, arguing he is delivering his promises across the board.
He has also argued that 2027 will be determined by the development record rather than political rhetoric.
Mt Kenya is said to be central to Ruto's calculus in the 2027 race, considering the mixed signals from the ODM side.
Pundits argue that while Ruto appears keen to consolidate support in the Raila Odinga strongholds, he needs a sizeable vote in Mt Kenya to make the cut in the first run.
Gachagua's impeachment is argued to have sullied the waters in what was Ruto's premier constituency in the 2022 race. The backing is said to have secured him the win over Raila, who was then backed by Uhuru Kenyatta.