A Chicken Seller Turns Into Kenyan President: Here Is All You Need To Know About William Ruto

A Chicken Seller Turns Into Kenyan President: Here Is All You Need To Know About William Ruto

By Spy Uganda 

It’s no longer news that senior politician William Samoei Arap Ruto has ‘slaughtered’ veteran opposition candidate Raila Amolo Odinga in the 2022 Kenya Presidential elections making him the Country’s fifth President succeeding two-term President Uhuru Kenyatta.

The 55-year-old Kenya Kwanza front runner defeated the Uhuru-backed Odinga, 77, with Agano and Roots Party candidates David Mwaure and George Wajackoyah respectively conceding defeat on Sunday to endorse Ruto.

About 50.49 per cent of at least 14million Kenyans voted for Ruto in the decisive poll which now halts the ascendancy of the Kenyatta-Odinga families since 1964 in the East African powerhouse. The IEBC data shows 48.5 per cent polled for Odinga.

In the rolling red hills outside the western Kenyan town of Eldoret, residents remember William Ruto as a barefoot schoolboy who used to sell chickens at a roadside stall.

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“I couldn’t even imagine that someone who wouldn’t have shoes for the rest of their life in elementary school could become president,” said a smiling Ruto days back during campaigns. “We imagine that all the leaders are from wealthy families.”

Ruto takes office as Kenya faces a convergence of challenges. Billions of dollars in loans that outgoing President Uhuru Kenyatta borrowed to finance an infrastructure are falling apart.

The worst drought in 40 years has ravaged the north, forcing 4 million people to depend on food aid.

Ruto promises to reward low-income “hustlers” and scorn Kenya’s political dynasties.

Who Is Ruto?

Born 21 December, 1966 in Uasin Gishu County, Ruto has risen from humble beginnings in Sugoi to become one of the richest and most powerful men in Kenya.

With almost an entire working career in politics, Ruto, a youthful 55-year-old and on his first presidential campaign, still radiates the vigour and energy first witnessed when he made his entry into politics while still a fresh-faced University of Nairobi graduate at the dawn of multiparty-ism in 1992.

He was an enthusiastic supporter of President Daniel arap Moi’s KANU regime, and all along retained the conservative, even reactionary, bent that resisted the transition to democratization in the early years, and adoption of the progressive new constitutional order in 2010.

Ruto, then just 25, was still trying to find his feet teaching secondary school at some rural outpost after completing university, and making his way up the amorphous Youth for KANU ’92 organization, an outfit formed by Moi and given access to unlimited public funds in an attempt to woo back the young generation.

There is no doubt that Ruto’s ‘Hustler Nation’ movement, ‘Bottom Up’ economic programme, populist rhetoric and exploitation of the victim card has struck a chord with the masses, and allowed him to make significant inroads into the natural Odinga constituencies in both socio-economic classes and regional blocs.

The politician completing two terms as Deputy President came into office on the back of a career built on faithful service of Ancient Regime, but has magically transformed himself into the champion of the poor and voiceless, with his crusade against the ‘dynasties’ he so loyally served and partnered turning the form book upside down.

Ruto has not only stolen Raila Odinga’s outsider ideology and rhetoric, but for much of the past three or four years has had his principal rival on the defensive and forced him to play catch-up. He has also cloned himself as a spitting image of the vintage Odinga in terms of policy and platforms.

Played Both Sides

In many ways, Ruto has managed to package himself as the forward-looking candidate promising fresh new ideas and a break from the past; despite his own dodgy past as a cheerleader for the one-party regime and reactionary opposition to the fight for democracy and the new liberal constitution.

At the first multiparty elections in 1992, Odinga won the Lang’ata parliamentary seat in Nairobi on the Ford Kenya ticket, while Ruto was busy navigating the murky world of infighting within YK ’92 and trying to catch President Moi’s eye.

Moi, courtesy of a split opposition featuring three major challengers—Kenneth Matiba of Ford Asili, Mwai Kibaki of DP and Raila Odinga of Ford Kenya—retained the presidency on a minority vote.

Soon after the elections, YK ’92 was scattered as chairman Cyrus Jirongo was accused of plotting against the government.

Some key members led by secretary Sam Nyamweya remained loyal to Moi, while Jirongo and his supporters went into insurgency mode and started flirting with the opposition. Ruto, a minor YK official, adroitly played both sides, cultivating close links with power brokers in the Moi administration such as favourite son Gideon Moi, wheeler-dealer Mark Too and State House aide and business proxy Joshua Kulei.

Come the 1997 election, and Ruto handily won the Eldoret North seat. Odinga also retained the Lang’ata seat, but on the NDP ticket after having ditched Ford Kenya midstream on losing a power struggle to Kijana Wamalwa following the death of Jaramogi in 1994.

As the others protested Moi’s victory, Odinga changed tack and started a policy of cooperation with the long-serving incumbent seeing out his final term under multiparty constitution.

The cooperation resulted in the eventual swallowing of NDP by KANU, with Odinga emerging as secretary-general of the ‘Independence’ party that had ruled Kenya since 1963.

The merger was also part of Moi’s succession plan as he served out his final term under the multiparty constitution, bringing in a crop of youthful leaders to replace his old guard.

Among the key players in the scheme was Ruto, who also brought in his old YK92 colleague Jirongo, who earned a cabinet slot. Ruto settled for the post of Director of Elections, and with Gideon Moi became the key players behind a plan to hand Uhuru Kenyatta the succession keys.

Remained In KANU

When Moi finally named Kenyatta as his chosen successor, it was Odinga who mustered the guile and courage to lead a rebellion that ultimately resulted in mass defection by a whole galaxy of powerful figures to back the Kibaki’s third presidential bid under the newly-crafted National Alliance of Kenya, a triumvirate of Kibaki, Wamalwa and Ms Ngilu.

When Odinga, Saitoti, Musyoka and others crossed over, the bigger opposition alliance was christened National Rainbow Coalition (NARC).

Ruto remained in KANU to back Kenyatta’s presidential bid.

But Kibaki easily won the 2002 presidential elections, with Odinga becoming a powerful minister for Public Works, Roads and Housing. Kenyatta took up his role as leader of the opposition, with Ruto a key figure in KANU.

Things turned around in 2005 when Odinga and other key figures in the Kibaki government who had crossed over from KANU in 2002 rejected a proposed new constitution.

They teamed up with Kenyatta and Ruto in a movement driving ‘Orange’ no campaign against the ‘Banana’ yes in the referendum.

Once constitutional proposals backed by President Kibaki were defeated in the referendum, he reconstituted his Cabinet by dropping Odinga and leading no campaigners.

The changes led to the Orange campaign morphing into the Orange Democratic Movement led by Odinga, with Ruto and Mudavadi coming is as key lieutenants.

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