2007 presidential election and First Lady
Michelle Obama of the United States pose for a photo during a reception at the Metropolitan Museum in New York with Odinga and his wife
Ida Odinga (2009).
William Hague meeting Odinga, then Prime Minister of Kenya, in London, 10 August 2012 ,
President of Burundi,
Bingu Wa Mutharika,
President of Malawi,
Thabo Mbeki,
President of South Africa,
Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive chairman,
World Economic Forum, and
John Agyekum Kufuor,
President of Ghana, during the Opening Plenary of the World Economic Forum on Africa 2008 in
Cape Town, South Africa, 4 June 2008 On 12 July 2007, with Kibaki's reelection bid drawing close, Odinga alleged that the government was withholding
identity cards from voters in opposition strongholds with the intention to skew the election in favour of Kibaki. He also claimed that the intended creation of 30 new constituencies was a means by the government to fraudulently engineer victory in the
December 2007 parliamentary election. In August 2007, Odinga's own Orange Democratic Movement-Kenya suffered a setback when it split into two, with Odinga becoming head of the
Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) while the other faction, the ODM-K, was headed by
Kalonzo Musyoka who parted ways with Odinga. On 1 September 2007, the ODM elected Odinga as its presidential candidate in a National Delegates Conference held at the
Moi International Sports Centre in Nairobi. Odinga received 2,656 votes; the only other candidates who received significant numbers of votes were
Musalia Mudavadi with 391 and
William Ruto with 368. Earlier,
Najib Balala had withdrawn his candidature and endorsed Odinga. The defeated candidates expressed their support for Odinga afterwards, and Mudavadi was named as his
running mate. Odinga's bid for the presidency however failed when after the 27 December
presidential election, the Electoral Commission declared Kibaki the winner on 30 December 2007, placing him ahead of Odinga by about 232,000 votes.
Jeffrey Sachs (Professor of Economics and Director of
the Earth Institute at
Columbia University, and Special Advisor to former
UN Secretary-General) faulted the United States' approach to the post-election crisis and recommended an independent recount of the vote. Odinga and ODM leaders rallied against the decision, with
James Orengo and
Anyang' Nyong'o calling for mass action.
Violence broke out in the country. The government responded by deploying police and paramilitary units to counter public protests. Following two months of unrest, which led to the death of about 1,000 people and the displacement of about 250,000, a deal between Odinga and Kibaki, which provided for power-sharing and the creation of the post of prime minister, was signed in February 2008; it was brokered by former
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. Odinga was sworn in as prime minister, along with the power-sharing Cabinet, on 17 April 2008. The post of prime minister was last held by
Jomo Kenyatta between 1963 and 1964 following independence. Odinga was thus the second person in Kenya's history to hold the position.
2013 presidential election The next presidential election in which Odinga was to run was the 2013 March poll, involving Kibaki's handover of power. Uncertainty loomed over Odinga's main rivals, Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto, who had both been indicted by the
ICC of
the Hague for their alleged role in the 2007 election violence. Despite their pending case, the duo had been nominated by the
Jubilee party with Uhuru as presidential candidate and Ruto as running mate. A Synovate survey released in October 2012 found Odinga to enjoy a leading 45 percent approval rate against Uhuru and Ruto. To contest the election, Odinga's ODM joined Kalonzo Musyoka's Wiper Party and
Moses Wetangula's Ford Kenya in a coalition known as CORD (Coalition for Reforms and Democracy). Odinga was named as the coalition's presidential candidate, with Kalonzo as his running mate. Their opponents were a coalition known as
The National Alliance, consisting of Kenyatta's
Jubilee Party, Ruto's
United Republican Party, NARC (now headed by
Charity Ngilu), A number of western countries were not in favour of the Uhuru and Ruto candidacy in view of their pending ICC cases and association with "
crimes against humanity". Former UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan voiced his reservations, as did former
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson who cautioned against the election of Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto. He was notably quoted as saying that "Choices have consequences", referring to the fate of U.S.-Kenyan relations, with a Uhuru administration. Odinga ran for president in the elections held on 4 March 2013 and garnered 5,340,546 votes (43.70%) out of the 12,221,053 valid votes cast. The winner, Uhuru Kenyatta garnered 6,173,433 votes (50.51%). As this was above the 50% plus 1 vote threshold, the
IEBC declared Uhuru the president-elect in the first round without requiring a run-off between the top two candidates. However, in a press conference shortly after the results were announced, Odinga said that the election had been marred by the manual tallying process and that he would appeal the result to
contest the result in Kenya's highest court, The Supreme Court. In anticipation of the legal challenge, Odinga and his lawyers George Oraro, Mutula Kilonzo, and James Orengo, secretly instructed Raj Pal Senna, a Management Consultant from Barcelona to carry out a forensic investigation of the technology used in the Kenyan General Election 2013, during which the IEBC made claims on TV and media that there were "technological challenges", that servers overloaded and that the database crashed. During the Petition hearing, Chief Justice
Willy Mutunga made a finding rejecting the second
affidavit of Odinga which comprised 900 pages, on the basis that it amounted to "new evidence", which is not permitted under the Constitution. Subsequently, the Supreme Court issued a ruling dismissing the petition on 30 March 2013. The Supreme Court while declaring Uhuru the next president also declared that the
IEBC should not have included the invalid/spoilt votes in the calculation of the final figures and percentages. Chief Justice Willy Mutunga also directed that the EACC (Ethics and Anti Corruption Commission) and the DPP (Director of Public Prosecutions) carry out a criminal investigation of the IEBC in relation to the BVR, EVID, RTS and RPS. Odinga and his team did not attend Kenyatta's April 2013 inauguration, which marked the end of his tenure as prime minister, travelling instead to South Africa. The full findings of the supreme court investigation were later published as the OpCo Report, and inspired a documentary by documentary by KTN journalists John Namu and Mohammed Ali titled "50+1 – The Inside Story"
2017 presidential elections Claims of election rigging Odinga, through his lawyers James Orengo, Otiende Amollo and Clifford Ochieng claimed that forces associated with his main competitor Uhuru Kenyatta had hacked into the IEBC (Kenya's electoral body) server and tampered with its database. He stated that the results that were being transmitted by IEBC were false because they had been manipulated via a computer algorithm designed to maintain an 11% gap between him and Uhuru's votes. As such, he proved the votes were not real votes cast by human voters but the outcome of a computer generated formula producing artificial values. This intrusion into IEBC's system, he further said, affected not just the presidential results but the entire election, including the votes cast for MPs, senators, governors and women representatives. He called the alleged intrusion "the biggest vote theft in Kenya's history". Later while vote tallying was still in progress and the country was awaiting the announcement of the final results, Odinga revealed that his team had received information from a confidential source in IEBC indicating that results from its server showed him leading with an unassailable 8.04 million votes over Uhuru's 7.75 million votes. Based on this, he demanded he be declared the fifth
president of Kenya. The IEBC however rejected Odinga's contention, saying the winner could not be announced before the tallying was complete and also being an independent body it could not be compelled by one of the candidates to announce the results. The IEBC finally announced the results declaring Uhuru the winner with 8.1 million votes against Odinga's 6.7 million. The results showed massive losses for NASA, with Jubilee invading traditional NASA strongholds. NASA refused to recognize the results. Shortly after Uhuru's declared victory, violence was reported in some parts of the country which are opposition strongholds. However the violence was not of the scale witnessed in the 2007 election aftermath and broke out only sporadically.
Annulment of the presidential election After initially declining to take his case to court on the grounds that the court had previously made an unfavourable judgment against him, Odinga reconsidered and lodged a petition. After 2 days of hearings, the judges in a majority 4–2 decision returned a verdict on 1 September annulling the presidential results and ordered a new election to be held within 60 days. The court decision, read by Chief Justice David Maraga and widely viewed as unprecedented both in Africa and globally, held that the IEBC failed to conduct the election in the manner provided by the Constitution and so could not stand. Despite the Supreme Court ruling, Odinga announced his withdrawal from the presidential election, scheduled for 26 October, on 10 October. The reason for his withdrawal was his belief that the election would again not be free or fair, since no electoral process reforms had been made since the annulment of the last election, This resulted in violent uproar in various parts of the country some few days before and after the repeat polls especially in the NASA dominated zones. Alleged police brutality was reported as independent medic research organization (IMLU) cited 39 deaths and a high number of assault cases.
Swearing in as people's president On 30 January, Odinga staged a swearing-in ceremony in Nairobi where he named himself "People's President". During and a while after the this ceremony, the government through Communications Authority of Kenya shutdown TV stations and a few radio stations across Kenya to prevent live coverage of the event, a move which was criticised by the media freedom campaigners. Political tension was at its height throughout the country.
2018 handshake On 9 March 2018, amidst the heightened political tension and in an unexpected move, Odinga and president Uhuru Kenyatta shook hands at Harambee House, in what is widely known as the
2018 Handshake and made a joint televised appearance, in which they referred to each other as "brothers", and agreed to put aside political differences to allow Kenya to move forward. This brought to an end the then acrimony between the two major political divides.
2022 presidential elections Odinga was cleared to run for the presidency for the fifth time on 5 June 2022 by the
Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC). He filed his candidacy papers as a candidate for the
Azimio La Umoja–One Kenya Coalition party with the IEBC. On 6 June, Odinga launched his 10-point manifesto at the Nyayo stadium, flanked by his running mate, and hundreds of his supporters detailing his plan for the first 100 days in office if his camp carries the day in the August election. Odinga outlined a key component of his vision for the country, dubbed "the People's Programmes", which he promised as the foundation for his platform. Social protection, universal healthcare, job development, women's empowerment, investing in youth, education for all, food security, water for everyone, enterprise Kenya, and building on past triumphs were all part of the ten-point plan. He vied for the presidency against
United Democratic Alliance's candidate
William Ruto who garnered 50.5% of votes cast. After coming second in the presidential election, he filed a legal case challenging the result, which was dismissed by the Supreme Court. ==Political positions==