• Sun. Mar 15th, 2026

Ruto’s Housing Wins Set Him Up for 2027 Landslide—Unless Opposition Finally Gets Its Act Together

ByEditor

Feb 2, 2026

President William Ruto’s flagship Affordable Housing Programme, a cornerstone of his Bottom-Up Economic Transformation Agenda, has become a key pillar in his push for re-election in 2027. Launched to address Kenya’s chronic housing deficit, create jobs, and stimulate economic growth, the initiative has delivered tangible, if incremental, progress. By late 2025 and into 2026, the government reported thousands of units completed or handed over—such as 1,080 in Mukuru, Nairobi—and hundreds of thousands under construction or nearing completion nationwide. Officials claim it has generated hundreds of thousands of jobs, with ambitious targets of 200,000 units annually and up to 1 million jobs overall. In regions like Kisumu, Ruto has unveiled multi-billion-shilling plans, including 14,000 housing units, framing the program as a driver of youth employment and inclusive development.

Ruto frequently touts these deliverables as “proof of action” over opposition criticism, using high-profile handovers to contrast his administration’s results with perceived rhetoric from rivals. Supporters argue that sustained delivery on housing, alongside other infrastructure, bolsters his incumbency advantage and could expand his voter base, even in traditionally opposition-leaning areas.

Yet the program faces scrutiny. Critics highlight delays, land constraints, incomplete documentation flagged in audits, and questions over funding transparency via the Housing Levy. Broader public discontent—rising taxes, high living costs, and economic pressures—has fueled protests and softened Ruto’s urban approval ratings. Some view the housing push as politicized groundwork for 2027 rather than pure policy.

Recent polling offers a mixed picture. Infotrak surveys, including a December 2025 Western region poll, show Ruto leading preferences in key areas (around 25% in Western Kenya), but nationally, his support remains contested amid high undecided voters. Opposition figures like Fred Matiang’i and Kalonzo Musyoka poll strongly in pockets, though no one dominates.

A December 2025 TIFA poll underscores a critical factor: only 38% of Kenyans believe the opposition will unite behind a single presidential candidate in 2027, with widespread skepticism about fragmentation among leaders like Kalonzo, Matiang’i, Rigathi Gachagua, and others in the loose “United Opposition” coalition. Ruto’s camp, buoyed by by-election gains and coalitions like the broad-based government arrangement, projects a landslide victory—potentially by 2-3 million votes—if rivals stay divided.

The opposition’s path to victory hinges on consolidation and addressing voter priorities like the economy. Fragmentation favors Ruto’s machinery and delivery narrative. While the Affordable Housing Programme strengthens his case as a results-oriented leader, its success—and the opposition’s cohesion—will likely determine whether incumbency translates into a convincing 2027 mandate. With over a year until the polls, Kenya’s political landscape remains fluid, shaped by delivery realities and unity challenges.