The budding alliance between the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) Party and the ruling United Democratic Alliance (UDA) Party is facing its sternest test yet. As the two parties hammer out a pre-election pact for 2027 — building on the broad-based government framework initiated by Raila Odinga — one issue stands out as the potential make-or-break: electoral zoning. ODM is demanding it. UDA is flatly refusing. Yet a clear zoning formula may prove far more than a tactical compromise; it could be the very safeguard that keeps ODM politically relevant long after the 2027 votes are tallied.
Zoning, in Kenyan political shorthand, is an agreement between coalition partners not to field rival candidates in each other’s designated strongholds. The objective is straightforward: avoid splitting votes and handing victory to outsiders. The strategy has a proven track record. In 2013, the Jubilee Alliance quietly zoned Central Kenya for Uhuru Kenyatta’s TNA and the Rift Valley for William Ruto’s URP, delivering a first-round presidential victory. Similar informal deals shaped NASA and Azimio coalitions. Without such guardrails, even the strongest partnerships often haemorrhage support in overlapping ethnic and regional bases.
For ODM, the stakes could not be higher. The party’s parliamentary group, which met on 3 March 2026, instructed its negotiating team — led by Dr Oburu Oginga — to treat parliamentary seats across the National Assembly, Senate and county assemblies as “non-negotiable.” National Assembly Minority Leader Junet Mohamed put it bluntly: “We are telling any party that wants to associate with us that our parliamentary numbers are not negotiable. We can negotiate on other things… We want to increase our numbers in the next election.” ODM legislators have already accused UDA aspirants of quietly “raiding” traditional ODM zones in the Coast, Western Kenya and parts of Nyanza, using the broad-based government as cover. Some have openly threatened to walk away if zoning is ignored.
A properly negotiated zoning deal would give ODM the breathing space it needs to protect the organisational machinery it has spent two decades building. Nyanza remains the party’s undisputed fortress — its emotional and political anchor — where any UDA incursion would be seen as unforgivable. Outside that core, agreed zones in Western Kenya and the Coast would allow ODM to retain governors, senators and MPs who control patronage networks, development projects and grassroots visibility. Without that protection, UDA’s aggressive national expansion — already visible in parallel rallies and by-election skirmishes — risks steadily dismantling ODM’s infrastructure.
The real test comes after 2027. Should the coalition secure President William Ruto a second term with ODM backing, attention will immediately shift to parliamentary numbers and county control. A zoned ODM would enter the next administration with its strength intact, giving it genuine leverage over cabinet positions, development funds and legislative priorities. An unzoned ODM, by contrast, could watch UDA field — and potentially win — seats in its former heartlands, leaving the party weakened, reliant on government patronage and dangerously exposed to gradual absorption. History is clear: junior partners without defined territory are eventually swallowed whole. UDA, for its part, is playing the long game, with eyes fixed on 2032 and beyond. Denying a partner protected zones today is not an oversight — it is a calculated strategy to inherit the territory tomorrow.
Grassroots realities make the need urgent. ODM’s window of opportunity is narrowing fast. As more supporters gravitate toward the presidency for roads, bursaries and appointments, yesterday’s shifting loyalty can harden into tomorrow’s entrenched allegiance. Zoning would buy ODM precious time to rebrand, rebuild and prepare for life after the coalition without losing its identity.
UDA’s rejection is framed as a matter of principle. Party Secretary-General Hassan Omar has insisted that aspirants must be “free to contest anywhere in the country.” President Ruto himself has spoken of “friendly fire” in 2027, describing open competition as healthy democracy. UDA officials argue that formal zoning merely entrenches ethnic strongholds and contradicts the party’s ambition to become a truly national movement.
Even inside ODM, voices of caution exist. Some MPs worry that rigid zoning could be portrayed as weakness, alienating core supporters at the very moment the party needs to expand. Murang’a Senator Joe Nyutu has warned that an inflexible stance risks breeding disunity within the coalition and could cost urban seats through unnecessary vote-splitting. Critics also point out that past coalitions with strict zoning — Jubilee included — eventually fractured once the presidential prize was won.
At present, the only visible bond between UDA and ODM appears transactional: parliamentary numbers for the ruling party, access to state resources for ODM. Without zoning, many analysts see nothing more than a postponement of inevitable conflict. The upcoming ODM National Delegates Conference on 27 March 2026 and ongoing joint reviews of the 10-point cooperation agenda will determine whether the parties can strike a workable compromise — perhaps flexible zoning in some regions and open competition in others.
Zoning is neither a magic solution nor a fatal flaw. For ODM, however, it could genuinely serve as a lifeline — preserving parliamentary muscle and organisational relevance through Ruto’s second term and into the uncertain post-2027 era. For Kenya’s broader democracy, its value will hinge on whether it acts as a temporary bridge toward genuinely national parties or simply props up regional fortresses. In politics, clarity remains the only real currency. Without it, mistrust flourishes — and partnerships built on arithmetic alone rarely survive on goodwill.






