By James Okoth
In the high-stakes chessboard of Kisumu politics, few questions are generating as much debate as the succession of Governor Prof. Anyang’ Nyong’o. As the veteran politician approaches the twilight of his gubernatorial tenure, attention has increasingly turned to one man who has occupied the county’s second-highest office for years: Deputy Governor Dr Mathew Owili.
The argument being advanced by his supporters is simple but politically powerful: Owili is not merely an aspirant seeking power; he is the political heir who has been positioned inside the Nyong’o administration as the natural successor.
This gives him a head start that many of his competitors must fight hard to overcome.
The “chosen successor” narrative
In politics, perception often becomes reality. The strongest currency a candidate can possess is not only popularity but the perception of inevitability.
For years, Dr Owili has served as Nyong’o’s deputy, sitting at the centre of county administration, understanding government systems, interacting with senior officials, and becoming familiar with the machinery of governance.
Unlike opponents who must introduce themselves as alternatives, Owili enters the race selling continuity: a promise that the Nyong’o development agenda will not be abandoned but strengthened.
This is the political advantage of being the incumbent deputy governor. He is not presenting himself as a newcomer asking voters for trust; he is presenting himself as a custodian who has already been tested within government.
Governor Nyong’o publicly worked alongside Dr Owili throughout his first and second terms, with Owili accompanying him during key county engagements and government functions.
Nyong’o’s political shadow remains a powerful asset
Prof. Nyong’o is not just a governor leaving office. He is a national political figure with decades of experience, networks and influence within ODM and Nyanza politics.
A successor carrying his endorsement would inherit more than a name. He would inherit a political ecosystem built around party structures, relationships and government experience.
This is why Owili’s supporters argue that he represents stability at a time when Kisumu voters may be looking for continuity rather than disruption.
The deputy governor has previously maintained that his working relationship with Nyong’o remained strong and that their partnership delivered on their shared mandate.
The advantage of occupying the government space
One of Owili’s biggest strengths is visibility.
Politics rewards familiarity. A candidate who has spent years attending official functions, engaging communities, appearing in government programmes, and being associated with development projects begins the race with a level of recognition that new entrants must spend enormous resources building.
Every road project, health investment, education programme, or county initiative associated with the Nyong’o administration becomes part of the succession conversation.
His competitors must convince voters why they should replace a system they have already experienced. Owili only needs to convince them why he should be trusted to continue and improve it.
The Nyakach factor and regional arithmetic
Kisumu politics has always been influenced by community balancing and regional calculations.
Owili’s background in Nyakach gives him a strong base in one of the county’s influential political zones. His supporters have framed the contest as an opportunity for Nyakach to produce the next governor, a narrative he himself has promoted during political engagements.
However, this advantage also comes with a challenge: Nyakach has produced several influential political figures, meaning Owili must consolidate rather than assume support from the region.
Why competitors face a harder path
Those challenging Owili must overcome three major obstacles.
First, they must break the perception that the race has already been decided within the Nyong’o succession plan.
Second, they must build countywide networks strong enough to compete with someone who has been part of the county government structure for almost a decade.
Third, they must explain why voters should abandon continuity for a different political direction.
That does not make the contest impossible. Kisumu politics has repeatedly demonstrated that party loyalty, personalities, grassroots mobilisation, and public sentiment can dramatically reshape political fortunes.
The biggest battle: inheritance versus reinvention
The 2027 Kisumu gubernatorial contest is likely to become a battle between two political ideas.
On one side is inheritance: the argument that Owili represents the continuation of the Nyong’o era with a new face.
On the other side is reinvention: the argument that Kisumu needs a fresh political chapter beyond the current administration.
Owili’s biggest weapon is that he does not have to convince voters that he understands government. He has been inside government.
His competitors’ strongest argument will be whether understanding the Nyong’o administration is enough reason to lead the next one.
Ultimately, the question before Kisumu voters will not only be who can win the governor’s seat, but who they believe should carry the county’s next chapter.
For now, Dr Mathew Owili begins the race with perhaps the most valuable political asset of all: the perception that he is not chasing succession – he is positioned for it.



