Infotrak poll: Uhuru’s Jubilee ranks among Kenya’s top five political parties

By , July 13, 2026

Former president Uhuru Kenyatta-led Jubilee Party has emerged among Kenya’s five most popular political parties ahead of the 2027 General Election.

In survey results released by Infotrak on Monday, July 13, 2026, Jubilee recorded six per cent support, placing it fourth among the five leading parties listed in the nationwide ranking.

The United Democratic Alliance led the poll with 22 per cent, narrowly ahead of the Orange Democratic Movement at 21 per cent.

Former Deputy President Rigathi Gachagua’s Democracy for the Citizens Party followed with nine per cent, while Jubilee secured six per cent. Wiper Democratic Front recorded five per cent.

The survey asked respondents which political party they currently felt closest to and involved 3,000 participants.

Retired president Uhuru Kenyatta having a conversation with his deputy party leader Fred Matiang'i during the Kiambu party delegates meeting on Monday, May 25, 2026. PHOTO//https://www.facebook.com/TheJubileeParty
Retired president Uhuru Kenyatta is having a conversation with his deputy party leader, Fred Matiang’i, during the Kiambu party delegates meeting on Monday, May 25, 2026. PHOTO//https://www.facebook.com/TheJubileeParty

Jubilee ranks fourth

Jubilee’s performance places the former ruling party ahead of Wiper and several other established political outfits as parties begin positioning themselves for the next election.

The finding gives Jubilee a political foothold as it seeks to rebuild its national structures and recover from the internal divisions and electoral setbacks that weakened its influence after the 2022 General Election.

Its six per cent rating also places it within three percentage points of DCP, which has intensified its political mobilisation in Mt Kenya and other regions.

Other parties named in the survey included Ford Kenya, Kanu, the Peoples Democratic Party, Party of National Unity, Maendeleo Chap Chap, People’s Liberation Party and Usawa Kwa Wote Party.

They were grouped among parties outside the five leading formations and collectively received two per cent.

Infographic from Infotrak on political parties’ popularity. PHOTO/@InfotrakN/X

Large undecided bloc

Despite UDA and ODM leading the poll, the largest single group comprised respondents who said they had no political party preference.

Infotrak placed that category at 29 per cent, while another seven per cent declined to disclose their preference.

The figures indicate that a substantial share of voters remains politically unattached ahead of 2027, creating a major opportunity for mobilisation for both established and emerging parties.

However, the poll measured which party respondents felt closest to rather than how they intended to vote in the presidential or parliamentary elections.

4th President Uhuru Kenyatta during a Jubilee Party delegates meeting in Kiambu on Monday, May 25, 2026. PHOTO//https://www.facebook.com/TheJubileeParty

For Jubilee, the ranking signals that the party remains part of the national political conversation despite losing power in 2022.

Its challenge will be converting the six per cent identification into candidates, functioning grassroots structures and votes when the country returns to the ballot.

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