Garissa County’s 2027 gubernatorial race is already shaping up to be one of the fiercest and most consequential political contests in Northern Kenya’s recent history. Long before official campaign season begins, political temperatures are rising, alliances are quietly forming, clan calculations are intensifying, and the names dominating conversations in tea shops, mosques, hotels, WhatsApp groups, and political gatherings are becoming impossible to ignore.
Four men are emerging as the dominant faces of the battle for the county’s top seat: Ali Bunow, Muktar Shidiye, Dubat Fidow, and Abdul Hajji.
Each carries a unique political identity. Each commands different networks of influence. And each represents a different vision of what Garissa should become after years of political competition, development struggles, clan balancing, insecurity challenges, youth unemployment, and demands for economic transformation.
But beneath the public smiles and carefully crafted political messaging lies a deeper question that could define the future of Garissa County:
Who among them can truly unite the county while delivering real development?
The stakes are enormous.
Garissa is no longer the politically quiet county it once was. It has become one of the most strategically significant counties in Northern Kenya politically, economically, and geographically. Its growing urban population, expanding business class, youthful electorate, and increasing national political attention have transformed the gubernatorial seat into one of the most coveted political positions in the region.
This is not just another county election.
It is a battle for political legacy, regional influence, and the future direction of Garissa for the next decade.
At the center of the conversation is former governor Ali Bunow. A seasoned political figure with deep roots in Garissa politics, Bunow remains one of the most recognizable names in the county. His supporters portray him as an experienced administrator who understands the machinery of county governance and possesses the political networks necessary to bring national government support closer to Garissa.
For many older voters, Bunow represents familiarity, experience, and institutional memory. His political survival over the years has proven his resilience in a region where politics can shift rapidly and loyalties are constantly tested.
However, critics argue that the county now needs a new generation of leadership capable of responding to modern challenges such as youth unemployment, digital economy opportunities, urban planning, climate resilience, and transparent governance. Some believe Garissa’s politics must move beyond recycled leadership and embrace fresh ideas.
Yet dismissing Bunow would be politically dangerous.
In Northern Kenya politics, name recognition, clan goodwill, negotiation ability, and long-established political relationships still matter enormously. Bunow’s ability to reconnect with grassroots networks could make him a formidable force if he officially enters the race aggressively.
Then there is Muktar Shidiye, a politician many observers view as a strategic operator with growing influence. Shidiye’s rise has been fueled by his grassroots mobilization skills and his ability to maintain relevance within shifting political environments.
Unlike traditional politicians who rely solely on past achievements, Shidiye has increasingly positioned himself as a practical leader focused on accessibility and local engagement. His supporters believe he understands ordinary wananchi and possesses the energy needed to drive development projects more aggressively.
Political analysts quietly note that Shidiye’s greatest strength may lie in coalition-building. In Garissa politics, victory rarely comes from individual popularity alone. It comes from carefully negotiated alliances, clan arithmetic, elite endorsements, and turnout management.
If Shidiye successfully consolidates strategic political blocs while maintaining a strong grassroots campaign, he could emerge as one of the race’s most serious contenders.
Still, questions remain.
Can he expand his influence beyond his strongest support zones? Can he convince undecided voters that he possesses both the administrative experience and financial muscle necessary for a countywide campaign? And perhaps most importantly, can he survive the inevitable political attacks that accompany high-stakes gubernatorial contests?
Dubat Fidow enters the conversation carrying a different political image altogether.
To many younger voters, Fidow represents generational transition. He is increasingly viewed as part of a growing class of Northern Kenya leaders attempting to modernize political messaging and appeal to educated youth, professionals, and urban voters who want politics centered around development rather than endless clan rivalries.
His growing popularity among sections of youth reflects a wider frustration emerging across many counties in Kenya the demand for service delivery over political theatrics.
Roads, water access, healthcare, education quality, business opportunities, and technology are becoming central electoral issues. Younger voters are asking harder questions than before. They want measurable results.
Fidow’s challenge, however, will be converting public enthusiasm into a countywide political machine. Social media popularity and urban admiration do not always translate into electoral victory in Northern Kenya’s deeply layered political landscape.
He will need strong grassroots structures, significant financial resources, and broader regional alliances if he hopes to compete effectively against more established political heavyweights.
Yet underestimating him could become a major mistake.
Kenyan politics has repeatedly shown that youthful momentum, when combined with strategic alliances, can rapidly transform outsiders into serious contenders.
The Clan Equation, National Politics, and the 2027 Earthquake
Perhaps no factor will shape the Garissa gubernatorial race more than clan dynamics and national political alignments.
Whether politicians admit it publicly or not, clan influence remains central in Northern Kenya elections. Political negotiations often happen quietly behind closed doors long before campaign rallies begin publicly.
Every candidate entering the race must navigate an extremely delicate balance between clan expectations, regional interests, youth demands, religious leadership influence, and national political affiliations.
This is where Abdul Hajji becomes particularly interesting.
Hajji carries one of the most respected political family names in the region. The Hajji family has long maintained influence in Kenyan politics and public service, and Abdul Hajji’s entry into the race immediately changes political calculations.
To supporters, he represents professionalism, modern leadership, and disciplined governance. His image appeals strongly to educated professionals, sections of the business community, and voters who prefer a calmer, more technocratic style of politics.
His critics, however, question whether elite political branding alone can defeat seasoned grassroots operators in a highly competitive county election.
But Hajji’s political value may extend beyond public rallies.
His connections, institutional relationships, and ability to attract support from influential networks could quietly position him as a major power broker in the race. In modern Kenyan politics, perception, elite backing, and strategic alliances can sometimes outweigh crowd sizes.
Another major factor likely to influence the election is the relationship between county politics and national politics.
By 2027, Kenya’s national political environment could significantly reshape local alliances. Presidential coalitions, parliamentary contests, and regional kingmakers will likely influence which gubernatorial candidate gains momentum.
Garissa voters are also becoming increasingly politically conscious. Many now evaluate leaders not only through clan identity but also through development records, corruption allegations, public communication, and accessibility.
The next governor will inherit enormous expectations.
Residents want improved infrastructure, expanded healthcare services, youth employment opportunities, better roads connecting rural areas, water projects, investment growth, and stronger education systems. Security concerns, especially near border regions, will also remain a major campaign issue.
The biggest challenge for all four contenders may not be winning the election itself but convincing Garissa residents that they can genuinely transform the county beyond politics.
As the race slowly takes shape, one reality is becoming clear:
The 2027 Garissa gubernatorial contest is no longer just a local county election. It is evolving into a symbolic political battle over generational change, regional power, clan influence, governance style, and the future identity of Garissa County itself.
And if the early political signals are anything to go by, Northern Kenya may soon witness one of the most intense gubernatorial battles in its history.

