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Oburu Oginga

Winnie Odinga and Oburu Oginga Odinga

A bitter power struggle has erupted within the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) following reports that Winnie Odinga, daughter of the late party founder Raila Odinga, has locked interim party leader Oburu Odinga out of the late Raila’s historic Capitol Hill headquarters in Nairobi.

The move signals a dramatic escalation of tensions between the Odinga family and the party leadership just five months after Raila Odinga died in Kerala, India, and threatens to fracture one of Kenya’s most influential political movements.

Battle over party headquarters

Sources within the party say the dispute stems from the ownership of the Capitol Hill building, long regarded as the nerve centre of ODM’s political operations.

According to insiders familiar with the matter, Raila Odinga personally purchased the building during his lifetime and registered it under the Odinga family rather than the party. With the property now considered a private family asset, Winnie Odinga has reportedly moved to enforce control over the premises.

The decision effectively bars the party leadership under Oburu from operating out of the building that for decades served as the opposition movement’s headquarters.

For years, the compound hosted strategy meetings, campaign planning sessions, and high-level political negotiations, becoming synonymous with Raila Odinga’s political command centre.

Oburu forced to relocate

Stripped of access to Capitol Hill, Oburu Odinga has relocated ODM’s operational base to a residence along Riverside Drive in Nairobi.

Party insiders say the new base was acquired by a long-time ODM financier, adding another layer of intrigue to the unfolding leadership transition.

The move represents a symbolic and logistical shift for the party, which now finds itself operating away from the iconic compound that anchored its identity for over two decades.

Staff purge sparks emotional scenes

The crisis deepened earlier this week when a meeting convened at the Capitol Hill offices reportedly turned into an emotional farewell for several members of Raila Odinga’s personal secretariat.

Long-serving aides were informed their services were no longer required, triggering tears among staff who had worked with the former prime minister through multiple election cycles and political crises.

Among those reportedly affected was Raila’s long-time driver, who had served the opposition leader for nearly two decades.

However, ODM Executive Director Oduor Ong’wen sought to downplay the scale of the changes, saying only a small number of staff were affected.

“People have not been sacked,” Ong’wen said, explaining that some individuals had been working informally after Raila’s death and were being offered transitional arrangements.

Deepening factional divisions

The property dispute comes as ODM grapples with one of the most serious internal splits in its history.

The party is currently divided between rival factions over its political direction and its relationship with President William Ruto’s administration.

One camp led by Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna and Embakasi East MP Babu Owino has openly criticized the party’s cooperation with the government, presenting a report rating the ODM–UDA power-sharing arrangement poorly.

Meanwhile, the faction aligned with Oburu Odinga has defended the engagement as necessary for national stability.

Uncertain future for Raila’s political legacy

The latest developments underscore the growing uncertainty surrounding ODM’s future following the death of its founding leader.

For decades, Raila Odinga served as the party’s unifying figure, balancing competing interests while maintaining loyalty among grassroots supporters.

But with the party now facing property battles, staff purges, and factional rivalries, analysts warn that ODM may be entering its most turbulent chapter yet.

As one party insider put it, the padlocks at Capitol Hill symbolize more than a property dispute.

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Nairobi Senator Edwin Sifuna during his meeting with ODM party leader Oburu Oginga. PHOTO/The ODM party/X

Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) party leader Senator Oburu Oginga, on Wednesday, January 7, 2025, held a high-level meeting with the party’s Secretary General, Senator Edwin Sifuna, in a move seen as an attempt to steady the party amid growing internal tensions.

In a brief statement shared via X, ODM confirmed that Sifuna paid a courtesy call on Oburu at his Nairobi office, with discussions centring on party unity, cohesion, and the future growth of the movement.

“Secretary General Sen. Edwin Sifuna this morning called on Party Leader Sen. Oburu Oginga at his office in Nairobi. Their meeting centred on the unity and the growth of the party,” the party said.

Attempts to expel Sifuna

The meeting comes just a day after Migori Senator Eddy Oketch stepped back from a controversial motion seeking to de-whip and expel Sifuna from the ODM party, opting instead for alternative dispute resolution mechanisms.

In a letter dated January 6, 2026, Aguko, Osman & Company Advocates, acting on behalf of Senator Oketch, announced the withdrawal of a motion that had been filed just a day earlier on January 5. 

The lawmaker said the decision followed consultations with the party leader and Siaya Senator Dr. Oburu Oginga.

The advocates cited the legacy of the party’s founding leader, the late Raila Odinga, as instrumental in the change of approach.

“Following wide consultations with the Party Leader, Senator Dr Oburu Oginga and with utmost respect to the spirit of the founding Party Leader the late Raila Amollo Odinga, who embraced dialogue even with his fiercest enemies as the most preferred method of dispute resolution, we have received further instructions from our client,” the letter stated.

Despite withdrawing the motion, the letter maintained that there were legitimate concerns about Nairobi Senator Sifuna’s conduct.

“Being cognizant of the breaches as outlined in our aforementioned letter and the offensive remarks made by Hon. Senator Edwin W. Sifuna both against the Party and its members,” the advocates wrote, Senator Oketch had been “persuaded to withdraw the Motion Letter dated January 5, 2026.”

Instead of pursuing expulsion, the party will now invoke Article 16(1)(g) of the ODM Constitution, which empowers the party leader to facilitate amicable dispute resolution through Alternative Dispute Resolution mechanisms.

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Oburu Oginga

Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) party leader Oburu Oginga has declared that he will be the party’s presidential candidate should ODM opt to contest the 2027 General Election on its own, insisting the matter is already settled by the party’s constitution.

Speaking during a New Year address to Kenyans, Oburu said the ODM constitution is explicit that the party leader automatically becomes its presidential candidate if the party decides to go it alone.

“If we are going it alone, I want to make it absolutely clear that our constitution already has a presidential candidate for our party. That presidential candidate is clearly stated in the constitution of our party, and it is the party leader. I am the party leader speaking. I am the presidential candidate for ODM if ODM decides to go it alone,” Oburu said.

He warned party members against harbouring parallel presidential ambitions within ODM, stating that anyone seeking the presidency under a different arrangement should look elsewhere.

“Anybody who is preparing himself to go for the presidential election in ODM is misplaced. If they want to go for a presidential candidacy, they should look for another party. This particular party’s presidential candidacy is already decided by its own constitution.”

Oburu dismissed claims that ODM has been weakened or “sold” to other political formations, insisting the party remains strong, grassroots-based, and intact ahead of the 2027 polls. He described 2026 as a decisive year in which the party will make a final determination on whether to run independently or enter into a coalition.

“As we move forward, we are going to decide whether we go it alone or we go with other parties. If we decide to go it alone, we are there. Anybody who is saying ODM is sold to other parties is daydreaming. ODM is strong, it is kicking, it is up, and it is not about to be sold. It will never be sold. If it were to be sold, I do not know at what price,” he said.

He added that the party’s deep roots make it impossible to trade away.

“This party is too big to be sold to anybody. I do not know if there is anybody in Kenya who can afford the price of ODM. It would be too much, too expensive for them, because the party goes down to the grassroots, to the last person.”

Reflecting on 2025, Oburu described the year as one marked by both progress and loss. He paid tribute to the late ODM party leader Raila Odinga, describing him as both a national figure and his younger brother, and said the loss had profoundly affected the party and the country.

Despite the setback, Oburu said ODM had remained united and continued to make significant strides following Raila’s death.

He also clarified ODM’s current relationship with the Kenya Kwanza administration, noting that while the party is part of a broad-based arrangement with the government, it is not in a formal coalition.

“We are not fully integrated into the government. We are just in a broad-based arrangement, not even a coalition,” he said.

With the 2027 election cycle beginning to take shape, Oburu’s remarks are expected to intensify debate within ODM, party unity, and the strategic direction the party will take in the post-Raila era.

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