Jubilee party warns politicians attacking Uhuru over Raila's 2022 election loss

Jubilee party warns politicians attacking Uhuru over Raila's 2022 election loss

Former President Uhuru Kenyatta speaks during the Jubilee Party National Delegates Conference on September 26, 2025. PHOTO | COURTESY

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The Jubilee party has come to its leader's defense, former president Uhuru Kenyatta, after he was recently dragged into a political scuffle over the handling of campaign funds during Raila Odinga’s failed 2022 presidential bid.

This comes after ODM Secretary General and Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna engaged in an ugly war of words with the party’s Director of Elections and Suna East MP Junet Mohamed over who mishandled the funds.

Sifuna holds that Junet misused funds donated by Uhuru to support Raila’s campaign, while Junet claimed that Uhuru allegedly used his inner circle and family members to embezzle the funds.

While addressing the press on Tuesday in Nairobi, the party believes that the attacks are being conducted at the behest of the government, terming them dishonest, politically motivated, and aimed at diverting attention from the failures of the current administration.

The party maintained that Uhuru has never engaged in any dubious plans to settle political scores.

"At no time has our Party Leader, or the Jubilee Party, engaged in any plot to destabilise, 'buy', or hijack any political party," said the statement in part.

"The Jubilee Party is clear: the manufactured attacks on H.E. Uhuru Kenyatta are nothing more than a desperate attempt to create a convenient scapegoat for a government that has lost the confidence of the Kenyan people."

The former ruling party argued that Uhuru openly supported the late Raila's bid in the 2022 General Elections and those who sabotaged his election are within the ODM party.

"They should stop projecting their betrayal onto Uhuru Kenyatta. Jubilee will not allow our party leader to be dragged into schemes designed to sell out a party that Raila Odinga built over two decades," the statement added.

Jubilee believes that the attacks are solely aimed at manufacturing ethnic tension and reviving political divisions.

It asserted that it is moving to reclaim its "rightful place in Kenya’s political future", hinting at rolling out a nationwide membership recruitment, a transparent engagement with aspirants at all levels and announce alliances with like-minded political parties and allies.

In the scuffle, Junet claimed that the funds meant for agents were allegedly released by Uhuru to his brother, Muhoho Kenyatta, who then appointed a man identified as Peter Mburu to oversee recruitment and payments.

He added that Mburu presented himself as an IT expert capable of detecting and preventing electoral manipulation by the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), but that no agents were ultimately procured; neither in Mt. Kenya region nor in Raila’s stronghold of Luo Nyanza.

He alleged that Muhoho operated from a highly restricted office in Westlands, so secretive that even Raila himself could not freely access it.

From this office, Junet said, the handling of agents’ payments and campaign logistics was supposedly coordinated.

Junet strongly rejected accusations of betrayal, arguing that Raila would never have appointed him Leader of Minority in the National Assembly had he lost the former ODM boss’s trust.

On his part, Sifuna directly accused Junet of now pretending that Uhuru’s money was “dirty”, despite having benefited from it at the time.

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