Abstract

Kenya became a Crown Colony of the British government on 23 July 1920. Before then, 1895 to 1919, it was a protectorate of the British Government. Between 1887 to 1895, Scot William Mackinnon (1823-1893), under the auspices of his chartered company, Imperial British East Africa (IBEA), was running Kenya on behalf of the British Government. This article sets out to trace the road to democracy in colonial Kenya, though with a bias to electoral contests, from 1920 to 1963. While democracy and/or democratic culture is broader than mere electioneering, the article considers electoral processes as critical steps in consolidating democratic gains, as societies now find an opportunity to replace bad leaders and eventually installs a crop of leadership that resonates well with their pains, dreams, fears and joys. With its own elected leaders, the article hypothesizes, a society has a critical foundation because elected people are ordinarily meant to address cutting-edge issues facing a given society. Such concerns may include: poverty, corruption, racism, marginalization of minority, ethnic bigotry, economic rejuvenation, gender justice, and health of the people among other disquiets. Methodologically, the article focusses more on the 1920 and the 1957 general elections. This is due to their unique positioning in the Kenyan historiography. In 1920, for instance, a semblance of democracy was witnessed in Kenya when the European-Settler-Farmers’ inspired elections took place, after their earlier protests in 1911. They were protesting against the mere nomination of leaders to the Legislative Council (Parliament) since 1906 when the first Parliament was instituted in Kenya’s history. Although Eliud Wambu Mathu became the first African to be nominated to the Legislative Council in 1944, this was seen as a mere drop in the big Ocean, as Africans had not been allowed to vote or usher in their own leaders through universal suffrage. The year 1957 provided that opportunity even though they (Africans) remained a tiny minority in the Legislative Council until the 1963 general elections which ushered in Kenya’s independence. What other setbacks did the Kenyan democratic process encounter; and how were the democratic gains consolidated? While the article does not intend to focus on the voice of religious societies, or the lack of it, it is worthwhile to concede that a democratic process is an all-inclusive enterprise that invites all cadres to “come and build the barricading wall” for all of us.

Highlights

  • The making of the modern Kenya can be attributed to the Berlin Conference of1884/85, which divided Africa into segments, forming the current 55 states, the role of Scot William Mackinnon (1823-1893) cannot be overlooked

  • Eliud Wambu Mathu became the first African to be nominated to the Legislative Council in 1944, this was seen as a mere drop in the big Ocean, as Africans had not been allowed to vote or usher in their own leaders through universal suffrage

  • Eliud Wambu Mathu had been nominated as the first African in the Legislative Council (Parliament) in 1944.3 Apart from Mathu who was nominated to the Legislative Council in 1944, others who were later nominated are: Walter Odede (1947), Benaiah Apollo Ohanga (1947), John Kipsugut arap Chemallan (1948), James Jeremiah (1948), John Moroiyan Ole Tameno (1951), WWW Awori (1951), Francis Kiprotich Arap Chuma (1955), and Muchohi Gikonyo (1953)

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Summary

Introduction

The making of the modern Kenya can be attributed to the Berlin Conference of. In a confession to James Kimani (later, Hon Kimani wa Nyoike, 1935-2020), his nephew who had returned from studies abroad in mid-1960s, Mathu who became the first State House Comptroller in the independent Kenya (1963 onwards) confessed the deep pains of embracing a democratic process, and electoral politics in particular He had already lost two critical elections: one to Hon Mate in 1957, and another one to his ex-Alliance High School student, Dr Julius Gikonyo Kiano, in 1958. : Wycliffe Works Wasya Awori, son of a pioneer Christian convert in Western Kenya, Canon Jeremiah Awori, was a prominent trade unionist and politician who was actively involved in the agitation for Kenya’s independence He was a committee member of the Kenya African Union [political party] and later became a member of the Legislative Council [Parliament]. The final outcome of the 1961 Kenyan general elections went as follows: Political Party

11 Nominated MPs
Findings
Conclusion

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