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Maraga party aligns with Kenya’s majority

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United Green Movement co-party leader Neto Agostinho (left) presents the party flag to former Chief Justice David Maraga during the launch of his 2027 presidential bid at the party’s head office in Nairobi.

Photo credit: Wilfred Nyangaresi | Nation Media Group

For months, Kenya has held its breath, caught up in the suspense of a national courtroom drama that has spilled far beyond the bench.

Since former Chief Justice David Maraga announced his presidential bid, people have repeatedly asked which party he will run with. Now, we have the answer—and it landed like a judicial thunderbolt.

Maraga has chosen the United Green Movement (UGM) to carry his campaign. Not Jubilee, not ODM, and not some recycled tribal kiosk with a new coat of paint (thank God!).

UGM. Green. Fresh. Youthful. Audacious. A seismic shift in the political landscape.

This is not just another politician joining another party. It’s the former Chief Justice—the man who stood up to the executive branch, overturned a presidential election, and showed Kenyans that the law still has power—establishing his presence on a new political landscape.

The suspense is over. The game has begun. If current world politics tells us anything, it’s that young people around the world have a love story to write with untainted former judiciary heads.

Former Chief Justice David Maraga speaks during the declaration of his 2027 presidential bid on the United Green Movement Party ticket, at the party headquarters, Nairobi, on October 2, 2025.

Photo credit: Wilfred Nyangaresi | Nation Media Group

Maraga could have chosen any of the bloated dinosaurs grazing lazily in Kenya’s political savannah. He could have formed a tribal coalition like the rest of them, making empty promises and accepting bribes.

Instead, he has chosen the United Green Movement, a party whose ethos is rooted in integrity, environmental consciousness, and youth activism.

For a man who built his legacy on fidelity to the Constitution and refusal to bow to power, the fit is almost poetic.

UGM is not yet a behemoth. It is a sapling. But every great forest begins as a seed. And Maraga, in his deliberate way, has chosen to water that seed rather than fatten himself on the rotting pastures of yesterday’s politics.

In doing so, he has aligned his personal brand of incorruptibility with a movement that speaks the language of Kenya’s restless majority: the youth.

Before it starts to get distorted by the underwhelming uptake of voter registration, the youth are the political tsunami of 2027. Gen Z has shown their teeth, flooding streets and rattling the establishment.

Millennials, too, have grown weary of empty slogans from old men with old tricks. This demographic is not just voting age—it is Kenya’s beating heart.

As for the low voter registration turnout, just wait until the word “deadline” starts to get floated around. This is a generation that submits assignments at 11:59pm, and types out research papers in one caffeine-heavy night.

They’ll be fine. 15 million strong. I just hope the IEBC is well resourced for the final 30 days of this exercise. Back to Maraga…UGM speaks their dialect. Climate change.

Digital economy. Jobs, not handshakes. Justice, not bribes. Maraga may be a septuagenarian, but his record gives him credibility across generations.

When he nullified the 2017 presidential election, he stood for principle over power, and the youth remember that. They may not worship him, but they respect him. And in politics, respect is oxygen.

Imagine this alignment: a principled elder statesman with unimpeachable integrity leading a youth-driven party that wants to reinvent politics. That’s a wave. And waves don’t ask permission to crash.

While Maraga plants green seeds, the establishment grazes endlessly on corruption’s lush pastures. Jubilee is a ghost of itself, haunted by scandals.

ODM still lives in 2007, trying to resell expired hope. Kenya Kwanza struts on borrowed time, its campaign machinery creaking under the weight of broken promises.

And here comes Maraga, with no baggage, no whiff of tenderpreneurship, no billionaire benefactor dangling strings. He brings a clean slate into a dirty arena. For the old bulls, this is a nightmare. They cannot smear him.

He is not a thief. He is not a tribal demagogue. He is not desperate for survival. Instead, he represents an existential threat: the possibility that Kenyans might finally choose principle over patronage.

Of course, idealism alone does not win State House. UGM lacks the grassroots machinery, the deep pockets, and the nationwide tentacles that Kenya’s traditional parties wield like cudgels. Maraga will need allies—regional point men, civic movements, maybe even disenchanted insiders tired of the old circus.

He will need to convince the hustler in Mathare and the farmer in Kericho that a green vote is not just symbolic, but transformative. And while the green wave is not necessarily inevitable, it is a very possible reality. And in politics, possibility is power.

Maraga’s decision reshuffles the deck. The 2027 race was shaping up as a tired duel of old names, of recycled slogans, and uninspired manifestos. Now, there is a third force with symbolic heft and moral gravity.

UGM, under Maraga, could become the rallying point for every Kenyan who feels suffocated by the endless recycling of crooks.

Politics, at its best, is not about men but about moments. Maraga’s moment has arrived. His entry through UGM is a green dawn breaking over a weary nation.

A dawn that says politics does not have to be about stomachs alone—it can be about justice, it can be about innovation, and the stubborn belief that Kenya deserves better.

To the general reader: this is a chance to re-imagine the republic. To the political aspirant: beware, the wave is forming, and it does not care about your comfort. To the youth: this is your party. Not a promise. A platform. A chance to etch your values into the granite of governance.

The jungle is noisy, the old bulls are restless, but a new roar has entered the fray. The judicial lion has chosen his terrain. And if the roar of the lion syncs with the chant of the youth, then Kenya’s stale political script may finally be rewritten in green ink.