{UAH} Ocen/Pojim/Gwokto/Allan/Bobby/MzeeOcaya ..... et al: Stop Ruto movement takes shape
"The Deputy President, therefore, asks those running noisy charades and mock-campaigns to use their energy more productively while those funding the same to find a better use for their resources," Mugonyi said.
1. Stop Ruto movement takes shape

A scheme to stop Deputy President William Ruto from succeeding his boss is steadily taking shape and gaining momentum.
Phase One, according to people aware of it, was to remove the DP from making decisions on which development projects will be prioritised and funded by the government.
President Uhuru Kenyatta dramatically implemented that last week when he issued an Executive Order placing Interior Cabinet Secretary Fred Matiang'i in charge of all projects.
"There is no way we will allow Ruto to become President. Either he accepts to retire with his boss or we will force him to retire," pledged former Jubilee vice chair David Murathe yesterday.
Ruto's critics say he is corrupt, which he vigorously denies. They say he is already campaigning for himself, not the people of Kenya as he commissions projects. Central Kenya business leaders also have indicated they don't trust him to safeguard their interests. And Central wants one of their own to wield power. Further, Ruto is not descended from a Kenyan dynasty.
Read: Why William Ruto must become President before 2022 election
The second part of the plan will be implemented when the widely expected referendum will be held. The Building Bridges Team is expected to make wide-ranging recommendations on which constitutional changes Kenyans will be asked to decide.
People close to the President yesterday told the Star they will push for a ceremonial president, an executive prime minister and two deputies. But Ruto wants to be a powerful President.
The new positions would be filled after the 2022 General Election but the occupants will be decided before the polls.
In this plan, Ruto will not be the presidential candidate but will be offered one of the Deputy Prime Ministers position. Should he reject that, Baringo Senator Gideon Moi will take the DP's place.
"We believe anyone but Ruto should be President," former Starehe MP Maina Kamanda said.
But Kapsaret MP Oscar Sudi yesterday was quick yesterday to dismiss the plans, saying they are bound to fail.
"Who do they think they are? Why do they think their plans will succeed? The DP is not stupid, nor is he sleeping. We are also building new alliances that will take us to State House.
The third aspect of the plan is to build a new coalition bringing together Raila Odinga's ODM, Kalonzo Musyoka's Wiper, Musalia Mudavadi's ANC and Gideon Moi's Kanu.
Already Uhuru is spending a lot of time with Raila and consulting with him on many issues since the handshake on May 9 last year.
Kalonzo has also been brought in and Mudavadi is being encouraged to make inroads in Central Kenya.
Read: Ruto must seek Raila's blessings to lead Kenya - ODM
A mass walkout from Jubilee by leaders from Mt Kenya region is also part of the scheme. Some of the region's politicians are already considering creating a new party, cobbling together a new alliance with other parties, or revamping an existing party in order to stop Ruto.
But yesterday National Assembly Majority Leader Aden Duale said Jubilee was intact.
"Jubilee is firm under the leadership of President Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy William Ruto. When the President tells us at an appropriate time, we shall start campaigns. The President has said he will be Ruto's chief campaigner," the Garissa Township MP said.
On Tuesday, Murathe, who is seen as the face of the anti-Ruto camp, attended a meeting convened by Wiper leader Kalonzo Musyoka at his Yatta farm where he continued with his anti-Ruto rhetoric.
"The Constitution says the President and Deputy President cannot serve for more than two terms. But is there anything that stops the President from being Deputy President?" Murathe asked the Kamba nation, signaling Mt Kenya's determination to block Ruto.
In a not-so-veiled attack on Ruto, Murathe said, "I was surprised during the anti-corruption conference in Nairobi where the person who was being discussed over corruption was seated right there shamelessly."
Murathe previously has said Ruto is unfit to be president because he is "corrupt" and when he stormed out of Jubilee in a huff, he claimed Central Kenya would create a new movement to stop Ruto.
In Uhuru's backyard, two anti-Ruto groups have emerged, presenting a complex situation for succession.
Current and former legislators from the region have separately formed the Mt Kenya and Diaspora Leaders Forum and the Mt Kenya Parliamentary Group.
In a clear signal the plot is taking shape, a faction of Central Kenya leaders opposed to Ruto held a closed-door meeting at a Kiambu hotel on Tuesday.
The Star established that in attendance were nominated MP Maina Kamanda, former presidential candidate Peter Kenneth, former Dagoretti South MP Denis Waweru and former Nyeri senator Mutahi Kagwe.
Kiambaa MP Paul Koinange was also present as was Democratic Party chairman Esau Kioni.
Those cobbling together a political vehicle out of Jubilee are said to be behind the revival of President Mwai Kibaki's Democratic Party.
The DP has been inactive since 2007 when it rallied behind Kibaki's reelection. Kibaki ran under the Party of National Unity (PNU).
In a bid to inject fresh blood into the party, youthful former Transport PS Irungu Nyakera was recently tapped to be the party's deputy leader as it positions itself for Uhuru's succession.
More: Why it will not be easy for DP Ruto in 2022
A rejuvenated and reorganised Democratic Party, seen as an alternative fallback for the anti-Ruto movement, could soon hit the road.
Yesterday, Nyakera distanced the Democratic Party from the plan.
"The notion of the party being a fallback plan for disgruntled Jubilee leaders is misplaced," he told the Star on the phone.
The former PS said anyone engaged in DP activities is doing so as "a friend of the party".
"For us as DP, we are open to friends who need not necessarily be members," he said.
The party has a new team of leaders and has rejigged its youth wing, known as the Young Democrats.
The new officials are Njeri Njoori (national vice chair), Wambugu Nyamu (deputy secretary general), Jacob Haji (secretary general), Moses Ololowuaya (national treasurer), Dr Njagi Kumantha (organising secretary).
Former Livestock minister Joseph Munyao is the party leader.
The Young Democrats team are led by Lawrence Kariuki, Florence Mukami (organising secretary) and Geoffrey Akumali.
They are trying to popularise DP ideals, as crafted by its founder, Kibaki, in sittings countrywide.
The former president founded the Democratic Party with an agenda of economic sustenance and empowerment of Kenyans.
"The party's leaders, most of them aging, sought to revive the entity to save it from risk of collapse after their death," Nyakera said.
The DP, though warning against early political campaigns, says it will present a presidential candidate in the next election.
DP chairman Esau Kioni said, "The party has a large room for those who are or will be orphaned in their current parties."
He said the party has has not raided Nasa or Jubilee in the hunt for members.
Kioni said the party has registered members in at least 25 counties. "We are in Western, Rift Valley, Nyanza, Coast, Central, and Northeastern," he said.
"We are not into politics at the moment as elections are still far. But when that time comes, we will certainly be ready to work with parties that share in our ideals," Kioni said.
In 2017, the DP did not fold into Jubilee but endorsed Uhuru's reelection.
Ahead of the 2013 vote, Uhuru and Ruto rode on a joint ticket. The agreement then was that Ruto would automatically succeed Uhuru at the end of his term.
But the situation has changed in the face of moves to trim the DP's powers. Matiangi's appointment demonstrated that that all is not well between Uhuru and Ruto.
Matiang'i heads the National Development Implementation and Communication Cabinet Committee. His work is to supervise national government programmes and projects, seen partly as a strategy to achieve Uhuru's Big Four and clip Ruto's wings.
Belgut MP Nelson Koech said Ruto will triumph despite the roadblocks his enemies are trying to erect. He said the DP has countrywide support and dismisses Murathe as cipher.
"The DP has diligently worked cordially with the President in serving Kenyans. But day and night his enemies are strategising in vain to wage war between him and the President. God willing, they will be hereto witness Ruto lead this country," he said.
More on this: DP Ruto will never be President of Kenya - Atwoli
2. Stop using my name in your premature 2022 campaigns, Ruto warns critics

Deputy President William Ruto has issued a warning to unnamed individuals whom he accused of mobilising his 2022 presidential campaigns behind his back.
The DP also told politicians to leave his name out of "their shenanigans" as he is working to support the President to ensure that Jubilee's Big Four agenda succeeds.
Through his secretary of communications David Mugonyi on Thursday, the DP asked such individuals to use their energy more productively.
"At no time has the Deputy President approved, canvassed or engaged in any other form of preparation for a presidential or another campaign after the last presidential election," Mugonyi said.
He added that he(Ruto) does not, and has never 'approved, consented to or supported haphazard, sketchy, messy, premature political canvassing.'
"The Deputy President, therefore, asks those running noisy charades and mock-campaigns to use their energy more productively while those funding the same to find a better use for their resources," Mugonyi said.
Mugonyi said the DP is a democrat who believes that campaigning must be done at the appropriate time, in an organised, systematic manner.
"...that gives candidates the opportunity to have quality engagement with the people within a political party and based on issues and policies," he said.
Ruto's statement comes at a time when President Uhuru Kenyatta has been urging politicians to keep off politics and concentrate on delivering on development.
However, his words have been falling on deaf ears with some politicians from his Mt. Kenya backyard already plotting on how to undercut Ruto's bid.
Uhuru and Ruto came together in 2011 ahead of the 2013 elections where they successfully vied for the Presidency under the Jubilee Coalition.
The president is on record saying that the Jubilee plan was for him to serve as President for 10 years and Ruto to take over from him for another two terms.
But former Jubilee vice-chairman David Murathe, a close Uhuru ally, has relentlessly hit out at Ruto over his 2022 presidential bid asking him to retire with the President.
He has gone as far as threatening to go to the Supreme Court to try and lock him out of the race.
The onslaught began on December 26, 2018, during the Maragoli Cultural Festival, where Murathe said Ruto should retire alongside President Uhuru Kenyatta in 2022.
He said Jubilee had not made any MoU to support the Deputy President in 2022.
Murathe struck again on January 5 during the funeral of Jubilee secretary general Raphael Tuju's brother.
He said Ruto and Uhuru had served as a pair and should both retire in 2022.
More on this: Stop Ruto movement takes shape
Read: Why William Ruto must become President before 2022 election
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