October 2017 Kenyan presidential election explained

Country:Kenya
Type:Presidential
Previous Election:2017 Kenyan general election
Election Date:26 October 2017
Next Election:2022 Kenyan general election
Next Year:2022
Turnout:39.03% (40.48pp)
Registered:19,611,423
Needed Votes:50% + 1 vote (nationally) and 25% in each of at least 24 counties
Image1:2017 22 Inauguration Ceremony -21 (32236367533) (cropped).jpg
Nominee1:Uhuru Kenyatta
Party1:Jubilee Party
Running Mate1:William Ruto
Popular Vote1:7,483,895
Percentage1:98.26%
Nominee2:Raila Odinga
Party2:Orange Democratic Movement
Alliance2:NASA
Running Mate2:Kalonzo Musyoka
Popular Vote2:73,228
Percentage2:0.96%
President
Before Election:Uhuru Kenyatta
Before Party:Jubilee
After Election:Uhuru Kenyatta
After Party:Jubilee

Presidential elections were held in Kenya on 26 October 2017 following the Supreme Court's annulment of the results of the presidential vote in the August 2017 general elections.[1] [2] The election was won by incumbent president Uhuru Kenyatta of the Jubilee Party, who won 98.3% of the popular vote to defeat Raila Odinga of the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM).

Background

General elections were held in Kenya on 8 August 2017. Incumbent president Uhuru Kenyatta was declared the winner of the presidential contest with 54.17% of the vote, whilst his main rival Raila Odinga finished second with 44.94% of the vote. The opposition claimed that it had won and that the government had rigged the elections. The opposition appealed to the Supreme Court. Citing a breach of the technical processes required by the constitution and the law, the court returned a verdict (by a margin of 4–2) that the election had not been "conducted in accordance with the constitution", cancelling the results and ordering fresh elections to be held within 60 days.[1] In a television address Kenyatta complained that the decision was tantamount to overturning the "will of the people". He nevertheless stated that though he disagreed with the Supreme Court's decision, he would obey that decision. Raila Odinga on the other hand welcomed the court's verdict, saying "This indeed is a very historic day for the people of Kenya and by extension the people of the continent of Africa."[3]

Electoral system

The President of Kenya is elected using a modified version of the two-round system: to win in the first round, a candidate must receive over 50% of the vote nationally and 25% of the vote in at least 24 of Kenya's 47 counties.[4] [5]

Candidates

In early October, Odinga announced that he was withdrawing[6] [7] [8] [9] from the election.[10] Following his withdrawal from the presidential race, there was heated debate among lawyers as to the legality of IEBC continuing with the elections. Proponents of the elections argued that the court ruled a repeat election to be conducted within 60 days and this must happen no matter what the main opposition decides to do. Additionally, they argued that it was not possible to reform the IEBC as he was demanding due to constitutional limitations. Moreover, pulling out of the race required him to fill out a form 22a, which he refused to do, saying that it was an unnecessary formality. This means that he intentionally wanted to remain ambiguous and hence had not officially withdrawn. As such, his name would be in the ballot papers.

On the opposite end, opponents of the elections argued that the cancellation of one nominee means that there can no longer be an election as provided for in the Kenyan constitution following the 2013 Supreme Court ruling that such an event necessitated the cancellation of an election. Additionally, they argue that as this is not a fresh election but a repeat election, there is no need for any candidate to withdraw to do so by filling any form. This means that Raila's withdrawal through a letter was enough to prove that he is out of the race. Earlier, the Third Way Alliance presidential candidate Ekuru Aukot had appealed against the IEBC decision to exclude him from the vote citing a breach of the law. As it turned out, the court of appeal ruled that the IEBC decision to exclude the candidate had no basis in law since the October 26 election was a fresh election. The court also ruled that all presidential candidates in the October 26 election were free to contest as presidential candidates on October 26, 2017.

On 18 October, recently resigned IEBC Commissioner Roselyn Akombe issued a statement declaring that the second presidential election wouldn't be a fair election.[11] Akombe also fled to the United States of America out of fear for her life.[12]

On 18 October, IEBC Chairman Wafula Chebukati expressed skepticism about a fair election as well, claiming the IEBC commissioners were partisan-minded and that he would resign unless certain conditions are met to reform the IEBC.[13] [14]

On 20 October, the IEBC's chief executive officer Ezra Chiloba announced that he will not be monitoring the election and that starting 23 October, he will take a three-week vacation.[15] Chiloba's departure has created more uncertainty over who will monitor the election.[16]

On 24 October, the IEBC announced that it would now count back-up paper ballots and not rush to announce the official results based only on numbers sent from the polling stations like in the first presidential election as well.[17] The same day, Chebukati appointed IEBC Vice Chair Consolata N.B. Maina as the IEBC Deputy National Returning Officer.[18]

Results

On 30 October the IEBC declared Kenyatta the winner of the elections.[19]

Aftermath

Supreme Court decision

Two petitions were filed at Kenyan Supreme Court challenging the results of the 26 October 2017 election. The six judge bench unanimously decided that the petitions had no merit and upheld Uhuru Kenyatta's win for a second term.[20]

Inauguration

As per the constitutional timelines Kenyatta's second inauguration was conducted on 28 November 2017.[21]

Notes and References

  1. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-41123329 Kenya presidential election cancelled by Supreme Court
  2. http://www.nation.co.ke/news/Fresh-presidential-poll-to-take-place-on-October/1056-4082522-lym799z/index.html Kenyans go back to the ballot October 17
  3. http://edition.cnn.com/2017/09/01/africa/kenya-election/index.html Kenya Supreme Court nullifies presidential election, orders new vote
  4. https://web.archive.org/web/20121216232349/http://www.kenyadiasporavote.com/presidential-candidates/ Presidential Candidates
  5. Article 138 (4) Constitution of Kenya 2010
  6. BBC,10 Oct 2017 Kenya's Raila Odinga quits election re-run
  7. Standard, 10 Oct 2017 Four possible scenarios after Raila Odinga withdraws from presidential race
  8. Aljazeera, 10 Oct 2017 Kenya’s Raila Odinga ‘withdraws’ from election rerun
  9. The Guardian, 10 Oct 2017 Kenya: Raila Odinga withdraws from election rerun
  10. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/oct/10/kenya-raila-odinga-withdraws-election Kenya: Raila Odinga withdraws from election rerun
  11. Web site: Breaking News, Kenya, Africa, Politics, Business, Sports - HOME . Nation . 2020-12-15 . 2020-12-15.
  12. Web site: Kenyan election official flees to U.S. in fear for her life, saying new election will not be fair. October 18, 2017. Los Angeles Times.
  13. Web site: I will not go down as the Chairman who plunged the country into a deeper crisis-Wafula Chebukati. Samuel. Karanja. October 18, 2017. Tuko.co.ke - Kenya news..
  14. Web site: Wafula Chebukati sets conditions for him to remain as IEBC chair. Protus. Onyango. The Standard.
  15. Web site: Under pressure, Kenyan election official takes leave before new vote. Briana. Duggan. Faith. Karimi. October 20, 2017. CNN Digital.
  16. Web site: Eyes on Odinga as Kenya election board CEO takes leave before vote. Duncan. Miriri. Maggie. Fick. October 20, 2017. Reuters.
  17. Web site: Kenya officials change way of announcing election results. John. Ndiso. October 24, 2017. Reuters.
  18. Web site: News | Kenyans.co.ke . 2017-10-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171025022340/https://www.kenyans.co.ke/news/23993-wafula-chebukati-makes-new-appointment-iebc-teamhttps://www.kenyans.co.ke/news/23993-wafula-chebukati-makes-new-appointment-iebc-team . 2017-10-25 . dead .
  19. Web site: Kenyan President Kenyatta wins 98 percent of vote in repeat election. Katharine. Houreld. Duncan. Miriri. October 30, 2017. Reuters.
  20. https://qz.com/africa/1133526/kenya-elections-2017-kenyas-supreme-court-has-upheld-the-reelection-of-president-uhuru-kenyatta/ "Kenya's supreme court has upheld the reelection of president Uhuru Kenyatta"
  21. https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/politics/article/2001261546/president-uhuru-kenyatta-sworn-in-for-second-term-in-office "President Uhuru Kenyatta sworn-in for second term in office"