Nairobi, February 2, 2026 – Kenya’s political chessboard is buzzing with the hottest rumor yet: a high-stakes public handshake between retired President Uhuru Muigai Kenyatta and Democracy for Citizens Party (DCP)leader Rigathi Gachagua, slated for mid-February and poised to reshape alliances ahead of the 2027 elections.
The dramatic thaw—dubbed “Handshake 2.0” by excited netizens—has been brokered by Wiper Democratic Movement leader Kalonzo Musyoka, with former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo playing a key facilitation role during talks in Nigeria last month. Viral clips and posts flooding X (formerly Twitter) and other platforms describe the move as a masterstroke to unite fractured opposition forces, particularly in the influential Mt. Kenya region.
“Kalonzo is the man of the moment. He has delivered a grand handshake between Uhuru and Gachagua,” posted prominent commentator Bernard Kavuli, echoing widespread sentiment that this could mark a game-changing realignment.
The symbolism is unmistakable. It mirrors the iconic 2018 Handshake between Uhuru and Raila Odinga that redefined Kenyan politics for years. This time, the focus is on mending fences strained since Gachagua backed President William Ruto in 2022—despite Uhuru’s earlier rift with the current administration—and Gachagua’s subsequent impeachment and emergence as a fierce government critic.
Recent X buzz captures the excitement:
– “Handshake between Rigathi Gachagua and Uhuru Kenyatta is LOADING…” (with dramatic visuals shared widely).
– “Rigathi Gachagua and president Uhuru Kenyatta formal handshake will be happening later this month… Sema Wantam, Wantam, Wantam.”
– “Loading Earthquake Handshake Rtd President Uhuru Kenyatta and Rigathi Gachagua the 6th.”
Analysts see massive stakes: Gachagua’s strong Mt. Kenya base combined with Uhuru’s enduring influence among Jubilee loyalists and Kikuyu voters could consolidate a formidable opposition bloc. The goal? A unified front to challenge President Ruto’s Kenya Kwanza in 2027, potentially fielding a single strong candidate.
Yet skepticism lingers. Uhuru’s office has previously dismissed similar claims as “false and misleading,” and old rivalries run deep. Earlier outreach—Gachagua’s calls for truce to “save the Mountain”—had fueled speculation, but this Nigeria-brokered deal, amplified by Kalonzo’s involvement and Obasanjo’s elder-statesman gravitas, feels more credible and imminent.
As mid-February nears, Nairobi’s rumor mill is in overdrive. Will this symbolic clasp turn viral whispers into political reality, or fizzle as another fleeting headline?
One thing is clear: If it happens, Kenya’s path to 2027 just got a lot more unpredictable.
Stay tuned for updates on this fast-moving story.







