Kenyans losing faith in Jubilee Govt as they want Raila to remain in active politics!

Kenyans losing faith in Jubilee Govt as they want Raila to remain in active politics!

Dr. Job

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PRESIDENT UHURU KENYATTA'S JUBILEE HITS LOW MARKS IN SURVEY

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Jubilee government hits low marks in opinion poll released on Tuesday by Ipsos Synovate

By ALLY JAMAH

NAIROBI, KENYA: National approval of the Jubilee Government appears to be plummeting, with the latest opinion poll revealing that most Kenyans think the country is heading in the wrong direction.

And the media remains the most trusted institution at 68 per cent, higher even than President Uhuru Kenyatta's approval rating of 53 per cent, in the same opinion poll released yesterday by Ipsos Synovate.
The study has come at a time Uhuru's administration continues to battle rising perception that it is unfriendly to the media and non-governmental organisations and is doing too little to stem the growing cost of living and insecurity.

The survey reveals that as many as six out of 10 Kenyans (or 64 per cent) believe the Jubilee Government is taking Kenya the wrong way.

That is a whole two-thirds of the people sampled in the survey. Only a minority (29 per cent) said things are going in the right direction.
Among issues seen to be sinking the approval ratings of the eight-month old Jubilee regime are its failure to address the high cost of living, corruption in government, greed among elected leaders and the increased incidences of insecurity.

When participants in the survey were asked what they liked least about the Jubilee regime, three out of 10 (35 per cent) said the Uhuru and Ruto-led team has failed to address the high cost of living, while 17 per cent pointed to alleged corruption in government.

INSECURITY CHALLENGE

Twelve per cent of participants in the survey saw the insecurity challenge as an unsolved issue.
It is only in Central Kenya where the President enjoys support, with most respondents (54 per cent) polled saying the country is heading in the right direction.

But a significant minority (37 per cent) in the same region said things are not so rosy.

Surprisingly, some of the strongest disapprovals are from Rift Valley, the backyard of Deputy President Ruto, with half the people polled (52 per cent) saying the country is heading in the wrong direction.
Ruto's United Republican Party ( URP) is in the ruling Jubilee coalition that included Uhuru's The National Alliance party

Some in URP are said to be unhappy with the manner in which jobs in government are being dished out, saying Rift Valley has gotten a raw deal despite URP being a key player in Jubilee.

Not surprisingly, the strongest disapproval came from Nyanza, the home ground of former Prime Minister and Uhuru's main political rival, Raila Odinga, with an overwhelming 89 per cent respondents stating the country is going in the wrong direction.

Other areas where Jubilee received the strongest disapproval ratings include Coast (85 per cent) and Western (78 per cent), both strongholds of CORD as well as Nairobi (72 per cent) and North Eastern (68 per cent). Most people (62 per cent) in Eastern also believe things are heading in the wrong direction.

Even worse, more than half of those polled in the survey (52 per cent) believe the Jubilee government has done "nothing" during the time it has been office.

That figure is significantly higher than those who believe that free maternal healthcare is a key achievement (30 per cent) of the Jubilee regime.

COST OF LIVING

Asked about the most serious problems facing the country currently, Kenyans surveyed cited high cost of living, lack of employment opportunities, crime or insecurity and corruption in that order.

"As the rate of inflation has continued to creep up since June this year, the big increase in concern with this issue is seen between November 2012 and November 2013," said Synovate's Research Analyst Tom Wolf while releasing the results yesterday

Kenyans also cited leadership wrangles in Jubilee due to cases in the International Criminal Court as being as serious as tribalism in the country, followed by the threat of terrorism.

Among the things that some Kenyans like about the Jubilee government is the free maternal healthcare in which expectant mothers don't pay delivery fees in public health facilities.

They also like the youthful or energetic leadership of President Kenyatta and his Deputy William Ruto as well as other elected leaders

The opinion poll was done on the first nine days of November through face-to-face interviews of 2060 Kenyans across the country.

The margin-of-error attributed to sampling and other random effect of this poll's sample size is +/- 2.2 with a 95 per cent confidence level.

When participants were also asked to rate 23 public institutions and officials in terms of how much trust they have in them. Nine out of 23 of those obtained higher scores in terms of distrust compared to trust.
Among the best performing institutions in the trust index is the media (68 per cent) followed by a distant second by the Kenya Defence Forces (32 per cent), whose credibility took a serious beating after they faced claims of mishandling the security operation against the attackers of the Westgate Shopping Mall in September this year.

Standard Digital News - Kenya : President Uhuru Kenyatta?s Jubilee hits low marks in survey
 
Two thirds of citizens want Raila in active politics

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By ALLY JAMAH

NAIROBI, KENYA: A large majority of Kenyans want former Prime Minister Raila Odinga to continue with politics despite increasing calls by rival politicians in the Jubilee administration asking him to retire from the scene

This means that more Kenyans now want Raila to remain in politics compared to five months ago.
In July this year, Ipsos Synovate released poll results revealing that 32 per cent of Kenyans wanted Raila to remain politically active and even possibly contest the presidency again.
The latest poll, released yesterday by the research firm indicated that or at least two out every three Kenyans polled (or 59 per cent) now support the former premier's continued involvement in politics.
However, only about half of them (32 per cent overall) would want him to contest the presidency again in 2017.
By contrast, over a third would prefer that he retires from politics completely (39 per cent), a slight increase from the proportion that held this view in June (36 per cent).
Some politicians from the Jubilee coalition want the former PM to quit politics before he can receive a retirement package but Raila has rejected the offer, terming it an insult.
The July poll showed that respondents from Central, Eastern and Rift Valley regions at 66 per cent, 44 per cent and 38 per cent respectively felt that Raila's political career should end while those in Coast and Nyanza at 46 per cent and 48 per cent respectively felt his future in politics is still bright.
After the former PM lost in the March 4 General Election to President Uhuru Kenyatta, there were reports he would return to Parliament together with his CORD partner former Vice-President Kalonzo Musyoka.
Uhuru won the presidency with 50.07 per cent beating Raila, who polled 43.31 per cent of the 12.3 million votes cast.
The former premier has given all indications that he is not just about to withdraw from active politics and may again make a stab at the presidency.

Standard Digital News - Kenya : Two thirds of citizens want Raila in active politics
 
in the kenyan context opinions shift very fast.
 
where raila hails from lags behind in terms of poverty developnent index. seeking to find if his popularity ratings r dropping or improving will not offer food on the table to needy kenyans or solutions to challenges. cord should converge forces to bring developpment @ counties they represent & tone down in political rhetoric
 
What is the point of the above quote may I ask, before I digress.
Dr.Job habari ya mwaka mpya? I am glad that you passionate about building raila but the man is busy finishing himself
 
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