Cape Argus

Kenyan election too close to call

Kenyatta and Odinga neck-and-neck in presidenti­al race

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THE RACE for Kenya’s presidency between incumbent Uhuru Kenyatta and opposition leader Raila Odinga has tightened, with less than three weeks before election day and polls showing both candidates lack the support to avoid a second-round vote.

Odinga, a former prime minister, is backed by 47% of voters, while Kenyatta is at 46%, according to a poll by Infotrak released in the capital, Nairobi, on Sunday.

A separate survey by Ipsos showed Kenyatta at 47% and Odinga with 43%, up one point from a May survey. A candidate needs 50% plus one vote and support from 25 of Kenya’s 47 counties to be the winner.

“The outcome will depend on voters’ turnout and which side gets more people out on voting day,” Ipsos researcher Tom Wolf said. “If the opposition can do that, they can flip this and they can win.”

Kenyatta, 55, is seeking a second term against 72-year-old Odinga. Kenyan elections heighten investor concerns because of unrest that has occurred during three of the past five national votes.

Odinga, who has failed in three previous presidenti­al bids, has warned he won’t concede defeat if the vote isn’t credible and fair.

Kenya is in the throes of a drought that’s spanned three harvests and cut farm outputs leading to shortages of foods, including the staple maize, sugar and milk.

That has driven the inflation rate to the highest level in five years, squeezing families in an economy where almost half the population survives on less than $2 (R26) a day.

About 40% of those polled expressed confidence in Kenyatta, while 39% were confident in Odinga, according to Ipsos.

Some 61% said Kenya was headed in the wrong direction, while 44% support the ruling Jubilee party over the opposition National Super Alliance, which got 42% support, Ipsos said.

Kenyatta’s chances of winning in the first round declined to 49% from 62% in May, said Emma Gordon, senior analyst at Bath, England-based Verisk Maplecroft.

The race is “too close to call accurately” and avoiding a second ballot has become more difficult, Gordon said.

The government’s “mishandlin­g” of maize shortages may boost the opposition by swinging undecided voters away from Kenyatta, Gordon pointed out.

Among the most aggrieved are voters in western Nyanza, an opposition stronghold, while residents of eastern counties complain mainly of hunger, Ipsos said. – Bloomberg

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? POLITICAL SUPPORT: A woman walks past a shop with a message of peace painted by local street artist Solomon Muyundo, also known as Solo7, in Kibera slum, one of the opposition leader Raila Odinga’s stronghold­s in Kenya capital, Nairobi, on Monday.
PICTURE: EPA POLITICAL SUPPORT: A woman walks past a shop with a message of peace painted by local street artist Solomon Muyundo, also known as Solo7, in Kibera slum, one of the opposition leader Raila Odinga’s stronghold­s in Kenya capital, Nairobi, on Monday.

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