Jubilee deputy secretary general and Cherangany MP Joshwa Kutuny, a Ruto critic, said the DP faces the toughest of choices in navigating the shifting political terrain.
"Ruto is a man at the crossroads. I see a man who is hopeless and a lone ranger," Kuttuny said, adding the DP's camp could have been stunned by the Raila-Uhuru rapprochement.
"For a long time, he has adopted scavenging as his survival tactic. He has been the hyena waiting for the hand to fall. But it appears the hand may not fall any time soon. He looks like someone who never expected what is happening," he said.
Kutuny said the DP could be erased from the political scene.
"There is a possibility of his not even being the opposition leader in 2022. In fact, he could be sent to political oblivion for some years," he said.
Right now, he (Ruto) doesn't need to underestimate anyone, anyone can become president, he needs to step out and build more friends, Kutuny said.
With the 2022 political landscape shifting fast, critics say the DP is still not doing badly, despite his opponents' dirty tricks against him.
There are concerns Ruto's 2022 presidential run could be jolted by the absence of key regional kingpins in his campaign machine.
Unlike his opponents, Ruto has assembled a team of relatively youthful politicians — without key regional heavyweights — attempting to play national politics for the first time.
His strategy has largely failed in several recent by-elections where known regional chiefs have stamped their authority to ward off his penetration of their territories.
For instance, during the March 4 by-elections, Ruto's United Democratic Alliance-backed candidates lost in Matungu and Kabuchai in Machakos.
The Deputy President, who says his hustler nation is the biggest ever political movement in the country, has remained bullish saying with God and the millions of his supporters, he will turn the tables on his rivals.
He has blasted the One Kenya alliance bigwigs as basing their politics on ethnicity and tribal kingship.
"There is a perception in Kenya that unless you are working with so and so, who is the son of so and so, and unless you are working with leader x who is the tribal leader of that group, you are working alone. No." Ruto said in a TV interview last week.
Boasting of the support of more than 140 MPs, the DP trashed the credentials of the One Kenya leaders, saying they have no national support to match his political muscle.
"Now tell me, between this gentleman the hustler, who can put together 140 MP and the guy who can put together 20 MPs, who is alone? Surely, there is no political formation in Kenya larger than the hustler movement," he said.
(Edited by V. Graham)
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