Siaya Governor James Orengo has thrown his hat into the ring for the top seat of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM), setting the stage for a high-stakes contest at the party’s March 27 National Delegates Conference (NDC) in Nairobi.
In a bold declaration that has sent ripples across ODM’s rank and file, Orengo questioned the capacity of Oburu Odinga to steer the party in the post-Raila Odinga era, signalling he will openly challenge him for the leadership mantle.
Speaking ahead of the NDC, Orengo framed his bid as a rescue mission for a party he says risks losing its ideological anchor.
“There is a lot to fight for that needs strong leadership, not a praise and worship team. We need fighters,” the veteran lawyer-politician declared, positioning himself as the ideological heir to ODM’s combative opposition roots.
While acknowledging Oburu as “a good, honest man,” Orengo was unequivocal: he believes the party requires a leader with the gravitas, experience and national clout to unify and energise its base ahead of the next General Election.
Orengo has firmly aligned himself with Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna and the “Linda Mwananchi” faction—an outfit that portrays itself as the custodian of ODM’s founding ideals of social justice and grassroots mobilisation.
The faction has been at loggerheads with the “Linda Ground” wing associated with Oburu, amid accusations of careerism and alleged overtures toward rapprochement with President William Ruto’s Kenya Kwanza administration.
Orengo dismissed talk of a party split but drew a sharp ideological line:
“If we wanted to walk out, we would do so. But we owe it to Raila that ODM does not fall into the hands of brokers.”
The messaging is clear: this is not merely a contest of personalities but of direction—whether ODM remains a hardline opposition machine or pivots toward strategic accommodation.
Political observers note that Orengo’s latest move is less a surprise than the culmination of a quiet, long-standing ambition.
A founding member of ODM’s predecessor movements and a key legal and political strategist during some of the party’s most defining moments, Orengo has often been viewed as one of the intellectual heavyweights within Raila’s inner circle.
Yet, despite his loyalty and ideological consistency, Orengo was repeatedly edged out of the party’s top succession calculus during Raila’s lifetime—overshadowed by shifting political coalitions, generational considerations, and ethnic balancing dynamics that have long shaped ODM’s internal power matrix.
Insiders say Raila’s towering persona and centralised grip on party affairs left little room for a clear deputy-in-waiting. In that vacuum, Orengo’s claim—though historically grounded—never crystallised into formal succession.
With Raila now gone, that long-suppressed question of succession has burst into the open.
Oburu’s elevation to party leader following Raila’s death was widely interpreted as a stabilising move—an attempt to preserve the Odinga legacy while buying time for broader consultations.
However, critics argue that symbolic continuity cannot substitute for political dynamism.
Orengo’s critique taps into that sentiment. He insists the party must move beyond sentimentality and focus on organisational renewal, national expansion and ideological clarity.
The March 27 NDC is expected to:
Confirm ODM’s new leadership structure
Reconcile or formalise factional differences
Set the party’s strategy ahead of 2027

With ODM still boasting national structures and a formidable grassroots base, the outcome could reshape Kenya’s opposition landscape.
For Orengo, the stakes are personal and political. At this stage of his career, he appears determined to secure what many of his allies believe is a role he has long deserved.
For Oburu and his supporters, the argument rests on continuity, stability and safeguarding the Odinga political brand.
Despite the internal jostling, Orengo maintains that ODM remains “a political machine and a truly national party.” Yet the subtext is unmistakable: without decisive leadership, that machine could stall.
The coming weeks will test whether ODM chooses legacy stewardship or ideological combativeness as its guiding principle.
One thing is certain: James Aggrey Bob Orengo is no longer waiting in the wings.






