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News28 June 2026 - 14:09

Ruto rolls out development blitz in Ol Kalou as UDA fights to win by-election

State officials have crisscrossed the constituency to commission projects

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by ELIUD KIBII
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Tourism CS Rebecca Miano and Ol Kalou UDA parliamentary. candidate Muchina Nyaga during the launch of the upgrading of the Ngorika main road network to tarmac in Olkalou Constituency, Nyandarua County, on June 27, 2026

President William Ruto's administration has turned Ol Kalou into a hive of activity, rolling out a flurry of projects in what is widely seen as a strategic bid to bolster UDA's chances to win the July 16 by-election.

In a coordinated show of government might, Cabinet Secretaries, Special Projects head Dennis Itumbi and Principal Secretaries have crisscrossed the constituency to commission projects. The development projects span housing, transport, education, trade, land administration and digital connectivity.

The launches have frequently been attended by UDA candidate Muchina Nyaga.

The development offensive comes as the Kenya Kwanza administration seeks to shore up support in the Mt Kenya region, where popularity has dipped following the fallout between Ruto and former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua.

The Ol Kalou contest is thus shaping up to be an early political test of whether the government can reverse growing discontent in the Mt Kenya region.

Lands CS Alice Wahome launched the Ol Kalou Affordable Housing project and commissioned a modern market expected to benefit hundreds of traders.

Wahome led several of the events alongside former Public Service CS and presidential adviser Moses Kuria, with Nyaga, Nyandarua Woman Rep Faith Gitau and county leaders in attendance.

The government also launched Nyandarua University, a long-awaited institution expected to expand access to higher education in the county. Ol Kalou Technical and Vocational College hostels have also been commissioned.  

The transport sector has equally featured prominently in the government's charm offensive.

In a milestone for the region, cargo and passenger trains resumed operations on the Nairobi-Gilgil-Ol Kalou-Nyahururu railway line for the first time in nearly five decades. At the launch, wagons transporting fertiliser destined for National Cereals and Produce Board depots in Ol Kalou and Nyahururu were dispatched.

Kuria hailed the revival as evidence that Ruto's economic transformation agenda was gathering momentum.

He noted that the line would reduce pressure on the Nairobi-Nakuru highway, while lowering transport costs for farmers.

Tourism CS Rebecca Miano also described the revived railway as a catalyst for economic growth across the Aberdare region.

"The revived Nairobi-Nyahururu railway line will not only cut travel costs but reduce carbon emissions, while opening economic hubs across Ol Kalou and the Aberdare Highlands," she said, crediting the initiative to Ruto's Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda.

The government also opened Nyandarua county's first land registry in Ol Kalou, a move officials said would decentralise land services and reduce the cost and time residents spend seeking title documentation.

Miano later joined Wahome in issuing title deeds to residents, saying secure land ownership would unlock investment, improve access to credit and strengthen agricultural productivity in one of Kenya's key food-producing counties.

"By fast-tracking land registration and delivering title deeds directly to the people, we are turning dormant capital into active economic assets," she said.

ICT CS William Kabogo on Thursday launched three digital hubs in Wiyumiririe, Passenga and Mirangine, saying they would expand Internet access, digital literacy and employment opportunities for young people.

Taken together, the projects touch virtually every voting bloc in the constituency, from traders and farmers to students, youth, commuters and landowners.

This underscores what political observers see as a carefully calibrated effort to demonstrate the benefits of remaining aligned with the national government.

Throughout the launches, CSs have repeatedly framed the projects as evidence that the President's Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda is delivering tangible benefits at the grassroots.

The concentration of high-profile government activity has, however, reignited debate over the use of state development programmes during election periods.

Opposition leaders led by DCP leader Rigathi Gachagua have said project launches amount to a state-backed campaign designed to influence voters ahead of the by-election.

Senator John Methu, who is leading the DCP campaigns, has described the infrastructural blitz as an overt attempt to bribe the electorate using public resources.

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