Malava by-election: Two UDA primary aspirants awarded diplomatic posts
The appointments were unveiled before an enthusiastic crowd, with the new attachés reading out their letters on stage from Mudavadi's phone.
Kenya's government has awarded a pair of diplomatic postings to two ruling–party aspirants in Western Kenya, stressing the country's long-standing fusion of political patronage and state appointments.
At a campaign rally in Malava on Monday, Prime Cabinet Secretary Musalia Mudavadi announced that two defeated UDA primary contestants, Simon Kangwana and Rhyan Injendi Malulu, had been appointed Education Attaché in Uganda and Trade Attaché in South Africa, respectively.
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Both contestants had, alongside a third aspirant, agreed to step aside in favour of the party's nominee in this week's by-election.
The appointments were unveiled before an enthusiastic crowd, with the new attachés reading out their letters on stage from Mudavadi's phone.
A third aspirant from the same contest was appointed to the Kenya Revenue Authority last month.
Mudavadi praised President William Ruto for "keeping his word" and urged voters to return the ruling party's candidate on Thursday.
His pitch was blunt: representation within government, he said, requires voting for the governing party.
Such political choreography is hardly unprecedented in Kenya.
Diplomatic and parastatal appointments have long doubled as instruments of coalition management.
Yet the public nature of these announcements, and their proximity to a by-election, raises questions about the politicisation of the foreign service and the weakening of meritocratic norms.
Kenya has spent the past decade attempting to professionalise its diplomatic corps and sharpen its foreign policy machinery.
But as elsewhere in the region, party loyalty remains a decisive currency in political life.
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