[Capital FM] Nairobi -- President William Ruto has said he will accept it if he does not secure a second term in office, insisting that his political future ultimately rests in God's hands, while at the same time assuring Kenyans that the country will hold peaceful elections in 2027.
While Ruto's pledge for peaceful transitions sounds progressive, Kenya's digital infrastructure and fintech leadership across East Africa hang in the balance of electoral stability that has historically been more promise than practice. The continent's tech hubs from Lagos to Cape Town are watching closely — because when Kenya's political class actually honors democratic norms, it signals whether Africa's most innovative economies can truly decouple growth from strongman politics. Ruto's words matter less than whether Kenya's institutions can withstand the test without the usual post-election chaos that sends investors fleeing and innovation stalling.
SUMMARY BY STRATA · ORIGINAL REPORTING BY ALLAFRICA
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