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Morara Kebaso’s Inject Party Not Registered Despite Loud Promises

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The much-hyped Inject Party, led by activist-turned-political-hopeful Morara Kebaso, has been exposed as a phantom outfit.

A new report by the Office of the Registrar of Political Parties (ORPP) confirms that the party—officially named Injection of National Justice, Economic and Civic Transformation—is not registered.

Yet, since late 2024, Kebaso has repeatedly declared that Inject Party was fully registered and ready to offer free tickets to Gen Z candidates.

With bold speeches and viral soundbites, he rallied the youth behind a party that, as it turns out, legally doesn’t exist.

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Morara Kebaso built Inject Party on bold rhetoric and a passionate call to arms for Kenyan youth. But facts now tell a different story. The party doesn’t legally exist. It cannot offer tickets. It cannot join coalitions. And it cannot contest elections. [Image/Courtesy]

Inject Party Missing from Official Records

Morara Kebaso has spent months branding the Inject Party as the political revolution Kenya’s youth have been waiting for. But in a sobering twist, the latest ORPP report released in March 2025 lists only 91 fully registered parties, and Inject is not one of them.

The report clearly states that the ORPP is mandated under Section 34(e) of the Political Parties Act to keep an updated register of all parties. It confirms the drop from 92 to 91 registered outfits between February and March. Yet, Inject Party has never appeared on this list—before or after Morara’s public declarations.

This undermines the legitimacy of Kebaso’s promise that Inject would provide a clean, youth-driven alternative. Worse still, it calls into question how far his campaign is rooted in fact.

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Kebaso’s grand announcements started in December 2024, when he told supporters that the party had cleared all legal hurdles. “INJECT Party of Kenya will sweep Parliament, Senate, and all elective seats like a flash flood,” he said confidently.

He promised that young aspirants could run for office under Inject without paying a cent for party tickets. These declarations now look more like political theatre than truth.

False Hope for Kenya’s Youth

Kebaso’s message struck a chord with frustrated Gen Zs eager for new political voices. He framed Inject as a youth-first movement, promising change, integrity, and an end to the bribery culture associated with party nominations.

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He even doubled down in April 2025, stating, “I promise free party tickets for all youths seeking to vie for positions of leadership across Kenya with the INJECT Party.”

Such promises raised expectations, encouraged young people to prepare for political campaigns, and fostered online excitement. But with the party missing from official records, it seems Kebaso may have offered empty hope to a generation hungry for power and reform.

His pledge to not charge aspirants for party tickets now seems hollow. Without registration, Inject cannot lawfully field candidates in any election, offer party tickets, or enter coalitions.

Opposition Claims Fall Flat

In March 2025, Morara Kebaso announced that Inject had officially joined the opposition coalition. He declared the party would push for reforms and expose government failures, styling Inject as a new watchdog for accountability and clean politics.

“We are the opposition now,” he declared. “Gen Zs, we will soon be the government.”

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Yet without a legal party structure, Inject cannot be part of a formal coalition. Coalitions are formed by registered parties under strict rules outlined in the Political Parties Act.

This raises critical questions. Was Kebaso trying to gain attention through fake alliances? Was he misled about the party’s legal status—or was he knowingly leading a political mirage?

Kebaso has rejected partnerships with politicians he calls corrupt, insisting that Inject stands on principle. But integrity begins with transparency. If the party isn’t registered, how can it claim the moral high ground?

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