
New voter registration data by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission reveals how their electoral weight is expanding ahead of the contest.
IEBC figures show that while the surge has been dominated by urban and high population counties, smaller and historically marginalised regions’ gains could prove critical in a tight contest.
Counties in North Eastern, parts of the Coast, and the northern Rift Valley are registering thousands of new voters in the ongoing mass voter registration.
Latest IEBC data shows Turkana recorded a 10.5 per cent increase in its voter roll in just 10 days, adding 25,012 new names to its voter roll.
Samburu grew by 8.3 per cent to register 8,319, West Pokot by 6.5 per cent (14,279), Tana River by 6.4 per cent (9,063), Isiolo by 6.0 per cent (5,379), and Lamu by 5.9 per cent (4,810).
Garissa added 11,156 new voters, Taita Taveta (10,266), Wajir 9,477, Mandera 7,337, while Marsabit recorded 9,829 new voters.
When placed against their relatively small 2022 voter bases, the increases stand to give the regions significant say in the upcoming election.
For instance, Wajir’s 9,477 new voters build on a base of just over 207,000, while Mandera’s 7,337 adds to roughly 217,000 registered voters.
Central Kenya, a region long considered the kingmaker in the country’s politics, comparatively punches below its potential.
Counties in the Mt Kenya bloc, including Kiambu, Murang'a, Nyeri, Kirinyaga and Meru, recorded lower percentages in the first two weeks of the listing drive.
Kiambu, which is the biggest with 1.27 million voters, added 46,265 new voters, translating to a growth rate of just 3.6 per cent.
Murang'a registered 20,194 new voters – a growth of 3.3 per cent, Nyeri’s 18,839 translates to 3.9 per cent, Kirinyaga at 4.1 per cent (15,474 new voters) and Meru at 3.6 per cent (27,502).
Embu and Nyandarua fared even worse, posting growth rates of just 2.7 per cent (9,154 voters) and 2.2 per cent (7,906) respectively, and are among the lowest in the country.
Even so, the Kiambu's 46,265 new voters are nearly double Turkana's 25,012, albeit marginalised counties are growing two to three times faster in percentage terms.
While Nairobi added the most new voters in raw numbers, the arid and semi-arid counties of Turkana, Samburu, West Pokot, Tana River and Isiolo are also growing fast.
Compared with the 2022 voter register, Samburu grew by 8.3 per cent with its new 8,319 voters, West Pokot by 6.5 per cent (14,279), Tana River by 6.4 per cent (9,063) and Isiolo by 6.0 per cent (5,379).
The 875,501 new voters registered in the mass listing account for a national average growth rate of about 4 per cent. Nairobi, for all its 96,897 new voters, also grew at only 4 per cent.
For decades, marginalised counties have been treated as electoral afterthoughts, with their small voter bases viewed as unlikely to swing a national election.
Collectively, the sampled counties grew at an average of 10 per cent growth, in what observers hold changes that calculation. Some quarters cite an accelerated ID registration program.
Since taking office, President William Ruto has invested heavily in the northern and arid regions, key among them restoring peace in most parts that were disturbed ahead of 2022.
His administration's ‘Huduma Mashinani’ and drought response programmes, alongside frequent presidential tours to Turkana, Marsabit and Garissa, are cited as bearing fruit.
For Ruto, who faces the challenge of defending his coalition while keeping his Rift Valley base intact, the marginalised counties offer a valuable addition.
“The government's inclusive development agenda has brought the hitherto marginalised region into the centre of planning, decision-making, and development,” UDA Secretary General Hassan Omar said.
As such, UDA believes that if Ruto can convert even a portion of the new voters into actual turnout and support, they could cushion against losses at some of the core bases.
Pundits further hold that in working with ODM, of which the regions have been traditional strongholds, the president appears to have an upper hand.
In previous elections, the Raila party relied on overwhelming support in Nyanza, parts of Western and the Coast to counter Ruto's Rift Valley and Mount Kenya numbers.
Even so, his bases need to work harder. Turkana’s growth has beaten Homa Bay's 2.6 per cent, which listed 14,269 new voters or Kisumu's 16,549, which translates to 2.7 per cent.
Other traditional strongholds in Nyanza, like Siaya, registered 15,706 new voters, Migori (16,547), but fared lowly compared with Mombasa (21,258) and Kilifi’s 23,980 new voters.
To understand the stakes, the 2022 numbers come into sharp focus. In the then presidential election, the margin between Ruto and Raila Odinga [deceased] was about 230,000 votes nationally.
Turkana's 25,012 new voters alone represent more than 10 per cent of that margin.
If you add Samburu's 8,319, West Pokot's 14,279, Tana River's 9,063 and Isiolo's 5,379, and the total comes to about 62,000 new voters, which is more than 25 per cent of the 2022 margin.
And that is before counting Marsabit, Garissa, Lamu and Taita Taveta, all of which grew at nearly 6 per cent if juxtaposed against the 2022 figures.
The IEBC, in its press release on the figures, noted that the current registration exercise has proceeded smoothly in most areas, with only isolated security incidents.
“Registering as a voter is the first and most vital step in deepening our democratic roots and ensuring sound, accountable leadership for the next generation,” IEBC chair Erastus Ethekon said.
IEBC targets a total of 2.5 million voters at the end of the exercise, and reported an increase of 531,185 new voters between the first and second week of the listing.
A total of 49,502 voters transferred to new polling stations while another 1,066 changed their particulars. The commission has asked those who were not in the biometric register to enlist.
“By registering today, you are not just getting a card; you are securing a seat at the table where Kenya’s future will be decided,” Ethekon said.
He went on, “Let us demonstrate our love for Kenya by turning out in even larger numbers in the coming days.”
Historically low voter turnout continues to be a concern in many of the far-flung counties, by virtue of their being cut off from supplies and other necessities.
Logistical hurdles, insecurity in some areas and limited access to polling stations have in the past suppressed participation in elections.
The grand question, therefore, is whether the registration gains will translate into actual votes cast, considering the internal migration patterns.
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