The Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) is turning 20, and the party plans to mark the milestone with three days of pomp and festivity in Mombasa from October 10th to 12th. Secretary General Edwin Sifuna, in a statement on Wednesday, promised “a celebration of resilience, sacrifice, and unyielding commitment to democracy.”
But as ODM candles are lit in Mombasa, the bigger question lingers: is the Orange flame still burning bright, or is this an anniversary shadowed by the party’s slow fade from political dominance?
A Party Built on Resistance
ODM’s origins remain etched in Kenya’s political memory. Born out of the 2005 constitutional referendum, the orange symbol became the rallying cry for those who said “No” to a government-backed constitution. When the Orange side triumphed with 58 percent of the vote, it launched what many saw as a people’s movement.
By the 2007 elections, ODM had become the country’s most formidable opposition machine, led by Raila Odinga and a youthful, dynamic team including William Ruto, Musalia Mudavadi, Najib Balala, and Joseph Nyagah. The party nearly captured State House, and in the years that followed, ODM defined itself as the defender of constitutionalism and people’s rights.
The Festivities vs. The Reality
The Mombasa celebration will feature a Youth Summit, a Women’s Convention, a Youth Concert, and even a four-team football tournament with AFC Leopards, Gor Mahia, Bandari, and Shabana FC. Sifuna has also announced build-up events in Migori and Wajir, symbolic of ODM’s once-vast grassroots reach.
Yet beyond the music, speeches, and symbolism, ODM faces a tougher reality: a shrinking national footprint, internal discontent, and the looming question of succession in the absence of Raila Odinga’s direct bid for power.
A Movement Without Its General?
ODM’s fortunes have been tied almost exclusively to Raila Odinga, the party’s indomitable leader whose five presidential campaigns made ODM the face of Kenya’s opposition. But with Raila now immersed in the intricate balancing of Broadbased politics and no clear heir apparent within the party, ODM risks becoming a hollow shell—a movement without its general.
The generational question is unavoidable. While Sifuna speaks of youth summits and concerts, younger ODM loyalists, including Babu Owino, have been vocal about feeling sidelined. The party’s traditional strongholds, particularly in Nyanza, remain loyal, but its grip on the coast, Rift Valley, and parts of Western Kenya has visibly weakened.
From National Party to Regional Outfit?
The greatest danger for ODM at 20 is political contraction. Once a national force capable of rallying millions across the country, the Orange Movement today struggles to project influence beyond its Luo-Nyanza heartland. Its one-time allies—Ruto, Mudavadi, Kalonzo—have since charted rival political paths, leaving ODM increasingly isolated in a rapidly shifting political marketplace dominated by President Ruto’s UDA.
The Anniversary as a Test
For ODM, the 20th anniversary is not just a commemoration—it is a stress test. Can the party reinvent itself as a platform for the next generation, or will it simply rehash its liberation past without offering a roadmap for the future?
If the Mombasa event turns into another nostalgia tour, ODM risks confirming what critics whisper: that the Orange flame, once a bonfire of resistance, is now flickering. But if the party uses the anniversary to confront its succession question, expand its appeal beyond Nyanza, and reassert its relevance in Kenya’s opposition politics, ODM could yet prove it still has fire left for the next battle.
As ODM gathers in Mombasa to blow out 20 candles, the choice is stark—rebirth or decline.








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