Kenya’s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) is facing queries on its performance, even after implementing most of the directives from an earlier Supreme Court judgment that nullified the 2017 polls.
On Monday, the Commission declared Deputy President William Ruto as the president-elect. But his main challenger, Raila Odinga, has disputed the results, vowing to challenge them in court. Mr Odinga has until August 22 to sue.
So what did the IEBC do better this time? Kenyans are generally divided along political lines with those supporting Dr Ruto maintaining that the election was more transparent in the 2022 elections, while those supporting Raila Odinga argue that the IEBC repeated the anomalies and irregularities that led to the nullification of the presidential elections in 2017.
One of the key improvements in the 2022 elections is that the IEBC posted all the forms from 46,229 polling stations on the public portal that allowed access to any interested party.
According to Dismas Mokua, a political commentator, the process was transparent because IEBC had made Forms 34A—that contains the results of the 290 constituencies—public so that anybody who was interested in the results could do their own tallying.
It was a marked improvement from the 2017 elections when the IEBC refused to open the servers to verify the results even after being directed to do so by the Supreme Court. This was among the key reasons that the Supreme Court nullified the presidential elections in 2017.
Kenya’s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) is facing queries on its performance, even after implementing most of the directives from an earlier Supreme Court judgment that nullified the 2017 polls.
On Monday, the Commission declared Deputy President William Ruto as the president-elect. But his main challenger, Raila Odinga, has disputed the results, vowing to challenge them in court. Mr Odinga has until August 22 to sue.
So what did the IEBC do better this time? Kenyans are generally divided along political lines with those supporting Dr Ruto maintaining that the election was more transparent in the 2022 elections, while those supporting Raila Odinga argue that the IEBC repeated the anomalies and irregularities that led to the nullification of the presidential elections in 2017.
One of the key improvements in the 2022 elections is that the IEBC posted all the forms from 46,229 polling stations on the public portal that allowed access to any interested party.
According to Dismas Mokua, a political commentator, the process was transparent because IEBC had made Forms 34A—that contains the results of the 290 constituencies—public so that anybody who was interested in the results could do their own tallying.
It was a marked improvement from the 2017 elections when the IEBC refused to open the servers to verify the results even after being directed to do so by the Supreme Court. This was among the key reasons that the Supreme Court nullified the presidential elections in 2017.