Gen Z, Ghost Voters, and Broken Maps: IEBC’s Housecleaning Checklist

Kenya’s Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) is back in full gear – at least on paper.

With the swearing-in of a new Chairperson and six Commissioners in July 2025, the once-paralyzed electoral body now faces the real test: rebuilding public trust and democratic legitimacy.

But what does reconstitution really mean to the average Kenyan?

Beyond the headlines and photo ops lies a heavy responsibility – to fix a broken contract between citizens and the vote.

Legitimacy Begins Inside

The IEBC’s first steps signal intent: electing a Vice Chairperson, organizing committee leadership, and undergoing intensive induction on laws, past audits, and technology.

Yet the nation is watching not just what they do – but how they do it.

The By-Election Test

With over 1.2 million Kenyans left unrepresented across six vacant parliamentary constituencies and 16 ward seats, the Commission’s first scorecard is clear: can it organize credible, timely, and transparent by-elections?

Every action here counts – from gazettement timelines to public communication and dispute management.

Clean Data, Clean Politics

At the heart of electoral controversy lies a tainted voter register.

The IEBC must now confront the ghosts of elections past: purging dead voters, duplicates, and outdated entries.

Trust begins with data – and this clean-up could make or break the next polls.

Ms. Fahima Abdalla, IEBC’s Vice Chair 2027 (Image: Files)

Youth Power Must Go Beyond the Streets

Over one million Kenyans have turned 18 since the 2022 election, yet most remain unregistered.

The energy of Kenya’s Gen Z must be transformed into voter rolls – through digital civic campaigns, influencer collaborations, and grassroots activations in schools and colleges.

Redrawing the Map

The last electoral boundary review was in 2012.

Since then, cities have ballooned and demographics shifted. A new review isn’t optional – it’s constitutional.

If handled right, it could fix gross inequalities in representation. Mishandled, it could ignite political tension.

Reforms Can’t Wait for Crisis

Kenya has no shortage of electoral reform reports. What it lacks is implementation.

The IEBC now has a chance to lead from the front – from enforcing campaign finance laws to digitizing dispute resolution and professionalizing polling staff.

In a Nutshell …. 

The 2027 polls may seem far off. But Kenya’s democratic future is already being shaped – one decision, one by-election, one boundary review at a time.

And this time, the stakes are far too high for business as usual.

Fresh Faces: President Ruto Appoints New IEBC Chair and Commissioners

President William Ruto has appointed a new team to steer the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) – an institution at the heart of the country’s electoral integrity.

Through a Special Gazette Notice dated 10th July 2025, the President named Erastus Edung Ethekon as the new Chairperson of the IEBC, set to serve for a non-renewable term of six years.

His appointment, made under Article 250(2) of the Constitution and the IEBC Act, marks a new era for the commission, which has faced its share of political scrutiny and public expectations.

Alongside the chairperson, six commissioners have also been appointed:

  • Ann Njeri Nderitu
  • Moses Alutalala Mukhwana
  • Mary Karen Sorobit
  • Hassan Noor Hassan
  • Francis Odhiambo Aduol
  • Fahima Araphat Abdallah

Each will serve a similar six-year term as part of efforts to reconstitute the electoral body ahead of key political milestones – including the 2027 General Election and pending boundary reviews.

The new IEBC Chair Erastus Edung takes the oath during his swearing-in ceremony (Image: Files)

The appointments close a long-anticipated chapter in the post-2022 election reforms and follow a nationwide call for an impartial, credible, and independently run IEBC.

Kenyans will be watching closely as the new team assumes office – tasked not only with restoring public trust but also upholding the sanctity of the ballot.

As the country gears up for another election cycle, this fresh slate at the helm of IEBC will play a decisive role in shaping Kenya’s democratic journey.

The truth: The real reason why IEBC Commissioner Roselyn Akombe was pulled out of a plane at JKIA by police

The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) Commissioner Roselyn Akombe is trending on social media after news broke that police had blocked her from traveling to the US.

Akombe was slated to travel to America on Tuesday night August 15th but she was pulled out of the plane at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport (JKIA) by the police.

Rumors had it that the state feared Akombe was traveling to the US to spill the beans on the disputed election that’s why she was quickly blocked from leaving the country.

Roselyn Akombe

But it turns out that the IEBC commissioner failed to produce clearance from the Head of Public Service and Chief of Staff – Joseph Kinyua before she could travel abroad.

Citizen reports that it took the intervention of the US Embassy for Akombe to be released from police custody and be transferred to the government pavilion at JKIA; the IEBC commissioner has dual citizenship of Kenya and the US.

IEBC through their Twitter handle confirmed the issue has since been resolved and that Akombe had also left Kenya for the US. The IEBC commissioner traveled to America for an official meeting and is expected to return on Sunday, August 20.