Home Politics Morara says Gen Zs can only achieve overthrowing Ruto then regret later

Morara says Gen Zs can only achieve overthrowing Ruto then regret later

Activist Morara Kebaso has challenged the Gen Zs to drop the leaderless and partyless mantras if they want to liberate Kenya from Ruto.

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Activist Morara Kebaso has slammed the Gen Zs saying that their partyless and leaderless stance cannot achieve anything beyond toppling the current William Ruto-led government.

Civilian Coup Without a Plan is a Dead End

Through his X handle on Friday, August 1, 2025, Morara warned that while a civilian uprising may succeed in removing the regime, it will ultimately lead to fresh elections that will still favour organized political parties and established leaders.

“The only thing that PARTYLESS and LEADERLESS can achieve is a civilian coup to remove the government. But after 90 days there will be a fresh election. And in that election there will be PARTIES and LEADERS,” Morara posted.

He questioned whether the current protest movement is ready to take responsibility for the aftermath of a regime change or if the momentum is just noise that will fade before the 2027 elections.

“So, yes you can bring it down but are you ready to inherit the ruins and rebuild it?” he posed.

Activist Morara Kebaso speaking to SpiceFm. Photo: Screenshot/YouTube

Activist Morara Kebaso speaking to SpiceFm. Photo: Screenshot/YouTube

Focus and Unity Needed for Real Change

In a message that seemed aimed directly at Gen Z activists, Morara criticised them for wasting valuable time on infighting rather than forming a unified front that could challenge the political establishment in a sustainable way.

“You have spent too much time pulling each other down, calling each other moles, projects, psyops and allied BS. Can you now do something that delivers permanent results?” he asked. “Ama ni kelele tu alafu 2027 twende kwa debe to elect the same members of parliament in the tribal political parties?”

The comments sparked mixed reactions online. Some agreed with Morara’s view that real change requires structures and strategy, not just anger and digital noise.

Others accused him of undermining a movement that is still evolving and trying to find its identity.

Whether Morara’s message will serve as a wake-up call or simply stir more online backlash remains to be seen. However, it underlines the complex challenge of turning street protests into lasting political change.

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