RUTO’s victory may be short-lived as OKIYA OMTATAH blows things open at the Supreme Court – Look! No candidate attained 50% Plus 1 vote.

 


Tuesday, August 23, 2022 – President-elect William Ruto’s controversial win may be one of the shortest presidential victories in Kenya after 9 litigants filed petitions to quash it.

Among those who filed petitions at the Supreme Court seeking to overturn Ruto’s controversial win is Busia Senator-elect Okiya Omtatah.

In his petition, Omtatah wants the presidential elections quashed as well as the declaration of the President-elect and the Deputy President-elect, arguing that none of the candidates who contested for the top seat attained 50% plus one threshold as required by the Constitution.

He argues that the tabulation of the presidential results by the IEBC was mathematically incorrect, claiming that there was at least 140,028 untallied votes.

In a detailed explainer to his argument, Omtatah noted that the National Voters Register of Kenya, which was used at the presidential election, had 22,120,458 total registered voters. 

He then said that on August 15, 2022 IEBC Chairman Wafula Chebukati announced the results as William Ruto being the winner having garnered 7,176,141 (50.49%), Raila Odinga 6,942,930 (48.85%), George Wajackoyah 61,969 (0.44%), David Waihiga 31,987 (0.23%). This amounted to 14,213,027 votes which were classed as valid.

The total number of invalid/rejected votes was 113,614 summing up the total number of votes cast to stand at 14,326,641.

Chebukati had said that the aforesaid number, if compared to the total number of registered voters, which was 22,120,458, brought the voter turnout percentage to 64.77%.

However, Omtatah pointed out that a different figure was given from the commission on August 9 after the official closure of the polls claiming that Chebukati said the voter turnout stood at 65.4%, “based on the verification of the KIEMS kits which were functional during the process of voting.” 

“The Chairperson further noted that the 65.4% voter turnout was minus the voter turnout from polling stations where KIEMS kits had malfunctioned and the Commission had authorized the use of the manual register for voting.”

Omtatah argues, based on the foregoing statement, that the total votes cast should then stand at 14,466,779, which now means that some 140,138 votes were untallied.

He further brought another argument, saying that the untallied votes (140,138) should then be added to the initial total number of votes entailed in Chebukati’s form (14,213,027) to get the actual amount of the total tallied votes. This totals to 14,353,165 valid votes. 

Omtatah, therefore, noted that if the new number of votes be calculated against the votes that each candidate got to get their percentage, none amounts to the 50 plus 1% threshold. He says Ruto will have 49.99%, Raila 48.37%, Waihiga 0.22% and Wajackoyah 0.43%.

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