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Why limping Opposition and Church will find it hard to keep Kenya Kwanza on toes

Wiper Party leader Kalonzo Musyoka accompanied by DAP-K Party leader Eugene Wamalwa, former Kiambu Governor Ferdinand Waititu, and other leaders at St Joseph the Worker Church in Racecourse, Nakuru City, after attending a service on December 1, 2024. [Kipsang Joseph, Standard]

A resurgent fraternity of mainstream churches may have to hold the opposition's fort for some time, as those who should occupy that space struggle to get their act together.

Kenya's political opposition is limping towards 2025. It is a feeble and waning entity; a badly wounded crew overloaded with heavy assignments that it is ill-placed to perform. President William Ruto's Kenya Kwanza regime has intentionally whacked down the opposition over the past two years, to make it a sorry vestige of its original self in August 2022.

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