There is no doubt that Kenya’s democratic
space has widened in recent years. The freer flow of information has made it
easier for citizens to participate directly in the affairs that shape their
lives, especially politics.
But any keen observer should be concerned by the
state of our political discourse, particularly as the 2027 election approaches.
Our country is suffering from
hyperpartisanship—a style of politics in which every issue is forced through
the lens of camps, grudges, electoral calculation and, shamefully though
perhaps not surprisingly, ethnic mobilisation.
As the presidential contest
draws closer, that pathology is becoming more pronounced. The result is not
merely a louder political culture. It is the steady destruction of serious
public-policy discussion.
In a healthy democracy, citizens can
disagree fiercely about policy while still respecting facts, trade-offs and
institutional process. In Kenya today, that is increasingly not what happens.
Hyperpartisanship has made public-policy discussions shallow, misdirected and
intensely subjective.
Facts are cherry-picked or buried. Technical questions
are turned into loyalty tests. Complex proposals are reduced to slogans. Outright
lies and misinformation now circulate faster than sober analysis, especially
when political actors see an opportunity to weaponise public anger.
Take the controversy over the proposed
Adani-linked arrangement at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport. There were
legitimate questions to ask about transparency, procurement, public value and
sovereign control.
Yet the national conversation often swung between blind
outrage and blind defensiveness, leaving too little room for a serious discussion
about Kenya’s infrastructure deficit and how major transport assets should be
modernised.
Even where reports laid out the proposal in detail, the central
issues were procedural integrity and deal structure—not the cartoonish talking
points that came to dominate the public square.
The same pattern is visible in the debate
over a proposed Ebola containment facility in Kenya for Americans exposed to
the virus. This is a matter that should be discussed in terms of law,
biosecurity, public-health capacity, reciprocity and national interest.
Instead, it quickly became entangled in shallow political signalling.
The
reality is more complicated. Kenyan officials had already entered into a
framework in 2020 under President Uhuru Kenyatta, and they have maintained that
any arrangement must comply with national law and public health safeguards.
At
the same time, international health experts have raised practical and ethical
concerns about preparedness, patient care and the design of such a facility.
That is exactly the kind of issue that demands clear facts and calm
judgment—not reflexive outrage or performative politics.
Perhaps the clearest example is the debate
around the Finance Bill 2026, fuel prices and taxation. There are valid reasons
for citizens to scrutinise tax proposals during a period of economic strain.
But scrutiny is not the same thing as political hyperventilation. In recent
weeks, the public argument has often been clouded by recycled outrage,
exaggerated claims and misinformation amplified by actors nursing hangovers
from the post-2024 protest mood while already calculating for 2027.
Fuel prices, in particular, illustrate how
complex policy questions are flattened into simplistic narratives. Fact-based
analysis shows a more complicated picture than the loudest slogans suggest:
pump prices are shaped not only by taxes and levies, but also by landed costs,
exchange rates, logistics, margins and subsidies.
When leaders and agitators
reduce all of that to emotionally convenient falsehoods, the country loses its
ability to debate policy pragmatically.
Even more revealing was the recent exchange
between Treasury CS John Mbadi and Embakasi East MP Babu Owino before the
parliamentary Budget committee chaired by Alego Usonga MP Sam Atandi.
For days,
sections of the political class had pushed sweeping claims about fuel taxation
and supply, including the suggestion that Kenya’s imports were insulated from
disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz because cargo can also be sourced
through markets such as India.
Mbadi’s response laid out the simpler, harder
truth: even when fuel is procured through alternative routes or refiners,
global conflict still raises landed costs, freight costs, insurance premiums
and supply risks across the market. Kenya may diversify sourcing, but it cannot
exempt itself from global conditions.
That should have been an ordinary lesson in
economic interdependence. Instead, it became another partisan skirmish. Yet
this is precisely the standard citizens should demand from those with serious
political ambitions, especially members of Parliament: study the subject,
master the facts and then criticise the authorities from a position of
knowledge rather than applause-seeking ignorance.
This problem is no longer confined to the
political class. It has spread into the broader public, including among
millennials and Gen Z, groups often celebrated as hyper-informed, educated and
digitally savvy.
Yet many have absorbed the same partisan habits wholesale.
Every policy disagreement is interpreted through a political script, and biased
framing frequently pushes reason aside. It is no surprise, then, that online
debate has become toxic, abusive and openly tribal in ways that should unsettle
anyone who cares about national cohesion.
Too often, these conversations appeal
to impulse and identity rather than the pragmatic spirit required to build a
nation that is just, democratic and committed to shared prosperity.
This is the real danger of
hyperpartisanship in Kenya. It does not merely divide voters; it degrades national
reasoning. It crowds out honest policy discussion and replaces it with noise,
suspicion, propaganda and incitement.
A country cannot solve its tax burden,
public-health risks, infrastructure needs or cost-of-living pressures through
slogans and manufactured outrage.
As 2027 approaches, Kenya urgently needs a
political culture capable of separating evidence from emotion and debate from
manipulation.
If every issue is treated as campaign ammunition, the election
will not simply polarise the country—it will leave the country increasingly
unable to think clearly about its own future.