In recent months, The Standard newspaper has turned into a political circus. Its front pages scream with sensational headlines, seemingly hell-bent on tearing down President William Ruto’s administration.
From wild corruption claims to exaggerated public discontent, the paper has adopted a tone that smells more of vengeance than journalism.
And guess what? Gideon Moi owns the Standard—Ruto’s political rival and the man who lost his Baringo Senate seat in a humiliating defeat to Ruto’s UDA wave.
Connect the dots, and it begins to look like the crazy headlines are not just random—they’re part of a desperate political script.
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The Standard’s headlines aren’t accidental. They’re calculated. And they serve a clear agenda: weaken Ruto, bait him into a handshake, and revive Gideon Moi’s fading political fortunes. [Photo/Courtesy]
Standard Headlines and Gideon Moi’s Political Desperation
Let’s not beat around the bush: The Standard has been on a mission. And it’s not journalism—it’s politics disguised as newsprint. Owned by Gideon Moi’s Standard Group, the paper has been publishing some of the most aggressive, sometimes absurd headlines targeting President Ruto’s leadership.
Why now? Why the intensity? Because Gideon Moi is cornered. He once thought his name alone, as son of Kenya’s second president, would guarantee him political relevance.
But the 2022 elections shattered that illusion. He was swept aside by Ruto’s UDA tsunami, losing not just his seat but the very grip his family had on Rift Valley politics for decades.
And now, what we’re witnessing in The Standard is not editorial independence—it’s political blackmail.
The headlines have a pattern. They paint Ruto as weak, embattled, and corrupt. They amplify dissent and fabricate chaos.
They’re not meant to inform—they’re meant to rattle Ruto into one thing: a political handshake with Gideon Moi. This isn’t journalism. It’s a smokescreen for political bargaining.
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Rift Valley Rivalry: Moi vs. Ruto, Old vs. New
To understand this political warfare, you need to know the players. William Ruto and Gideon Moi both hail from Rift Valley. But that’s where the similarity ends.
Ruto is the hustler-turned-president, a political outsider who clawed his way to the top. Gideon Moi is a dynastic prince, born into privilege and protected by legacy—until the people finally rejected him.
Ruto’s rise disrupted the old political order. He outmaneuvered not just Gideon, but also the Kalenjin old guard that propped up the Moi dynasty.
He built UDA from the ground up and used it to crush KANU’s dominance in the region. In the end, Gideon didn’t just lose an election—he lost a kingdom.
Now, the headlines in The Standard seem to be a last-ditch effort by Gideon to remain politically relevant.
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If he can’t beat Ruto on the ballot, maybe he can destabilize him through media warfare. Maybe, just maybe, he can force Ruto to reach out in the name of “Kalenjin unity.” But unity doesn’t come through blackmail. And political truce isn’t built on tabloid tantrums.
The Talai Elders’ Push: A Blessing or a Trap?
Cue the Talai Council of Elders. They’ve now entered the chat, urging a handshake between Ruto and Moi “for the sake of Kalenjin unity.”
They invoke the name of Koitaleel Samoei, the legendary Nandi spiritual leader, and appeal to the cultural weight of reconciliation.
Their message? Ruto should bring Gideon into government. He should forgive, forget, and include the very politicians he buried at the ballot. They even want former ministers like Henry Kosgei and Sally Kosgey back in play—all in the name of unity.
But is this unity—or is it a trap? Let’s call it what it is. The elders’ appeal, while noble on the surface, looks suspiciously coordinated with the noise from The Standard.
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One creates chaos in public perception, and the other offers a way out through a handshake. Classic carrot-and-stick politics. It smells of desperation and backroom deals.
Gideon Moi himself has played coy, saying he only needs a “handshake with the people of Baringo.” But his media empire is clearly pushing for something bigger—access, influence, and a ticket back into power through the back door.
If Ruto gives in, it won’t be for unity—it will be a political compromise that weakens his presidency. And that’s exactly what Gideon Moi wants.
Standard Headlines Aren’t Just Ink—They’re Strategy
Let’s not pretend this is a media freedom story. It’s not about press scrutiny of power—it’s about a former powerbroker using media as his last weapon.
Gideon Moi may have lost his seat, but he still owns the ink—and he’s using it to write himself back into the conversation.
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The Standard’s headlines aren’t accidental. They’re calculated. And they serve a clear agenda: weaken Ruto, bait him into a handshake, and revive Gideon Moi’s fading political fortunes.
President Ruto should read between the headlines. The Rift Valley doesn’t need recycled leadership—it needs forward momentum.
And the Kalenjin community doesn’t need forced unity—it needs honest, accountable leadership rooted in merit, not media manipulation.
In the end, the headlines might scream loud. But they reveal more about Gideon Moi’s panic than they do about Ruto’s presidency.
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