President William Ruto has quietly set in motion what many analysts are calling his 2027 re-election playbook: he has implicitly directed his Cabinet Secretaries to double as campaign emissaries, leading regional programmes and development tours that now carry increasingly overt political overtones.
Although the directive was never issued in a public speech or official memo, the pattern has become impossible to miss: Cabinet Secretaries across ministries are showing up at public events, launching projects, and delivering speeches that go far beyond bureaucratic duty. A recent report described how several ministers have remained “on the campaign trail” despite a court ruling outlawing early electioneering.
Even though the newly enacted Conflict of Interest Act, 2025 (specifically Section 25) purports to allow Cabinet Secretaries and certain senior officials to engage in political activity while in office, critics argue the law undermines state neutrality and gives sweeping latitude for partisan campaigning.
To underline how high-level the strategy goes: the Speaker of the National Assembly, Moses Wetangula, reportedly added that he will “mobilize support for Ruto in the Western region” in the coming election — even declaring ambition to “take over the presidency in 2032.” This signals a long-game alliance that blends present campaigning with future power ambitions.
In Siaya CS Opiyo Wandayi has openly declared that he will spearhead Ruto’s reelection campaign urging the Luo community not to be swayed by “noisemakers who cannot win the presidency.”
Prof. Kithure Kindiki, the Deputy President recently declared confidently at a public rally that “national development will propel Ruto to re-election in 2027” — a clear signal that the government’s development agenda is being cast as Ruto’s re-election platform.
The parliamentary leadership and other senior state figures have repeatedly dismissed critics and framed opposition as “noise,” often emphasizing that the government’s visible development record should speak louder than political rhetoric.
It’s a sleek political pivot: roll out infrastructure, reforms and social programmes — but also turn them into sufficiently public spectacles that double as de facto campaign rallies.

The unfolding campaign-by-governance model has sparked immediate backlash. In June 2025, a High Court bench delivered a clear ruling that “early political campaigns” carried out outside the legally prescribed election period are unconstitutional.
Yet, less than two months later, Parliament passed — and the President assented to — the Conflict of Interest Act, 2025, which in Section 25 carves out an exception that exempts Cabinet Secretaries (and County Executive Committee Members) from the civil-service restrictions on political activity.
This legislative change has triggered major pushback: a constitutional petition has been filed to block the “blank cheque” for political activity by state officers — arguing the exemption undermines the constitutional requirement for neutrality, violates equal-treatment norms, and erodes public trust in institutions.
If the court agrees to suspend or strike down Section 25, it could deliver a major blow to Ruto’s 2027 strategy — forcing Cabinet Secretaries to choose between public duty and overt campaigning.
Why This Matters for 2027 — And Kenya’s Democratic Rules
State resources to partisan ends: When ministers carry out “development tours” funded by taxpayer money but with a clear political undertone, it raises fundamental fairness questions. The opposition argues this undermines equal opportunity for all political players.
Institutional neutrality vs. political expedience: The Conflict of Interest Act appears to tilt the balance — allowing senior state officers to wear both governance and campaign hats simultaneously. Many civil-society and legal actors view this as a dangerous precedent for politicising public service.
Potential backlash: If courts strike down the exemption, or if voters perceive the overlapping of government work and political campaigning as cynical or manipulative, it could damage credibility — for this government and future ones.
What began as a subtle realignment — ministers quietly leaning into political messaging while delivering services — is fast turning into a full-blown constitutional showdown. The upcoming months will likely see:
Intensified legal battles over the permissibility of political activity by serving Cabinet Secretaries.
A sharper narrative framing by the opposition: that the government is using “development for votes” — effectively undermining democratic fairness and risking ethnic/region-based favouritism.
Heightened public scrutiny: voters will watch closely whether announced projects translate into real benefit, or whether they become mere political showpieces.
President Ruto’s re-election campaign may have begun — not at a rally, but in project launches, ministry briefings, and regional development tours. With powerful political actors publicly committing to mobilize for him, the opposition is mobilising — not just in the streets, but in the courts.








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