The National Liberal Party (NLP) has fired a fresh warning shot in Kenya’s political arena after launching two new offices in Kitui County in just 48 hours, catapulting its national tally to an impressive 36 branches.
On Monday, the party cut the ribbon on its 35th branch in Mutomo, Kitui South, and barely caught its breath before storming into Miambani Ward, Kitui Central, on Tuesday to unveil its 36th branch.

The Miambani office will anchor NLP’s political grip across Mutula, Mutukya, Kanguu, Kithumulani and surrounding villages — effectively covering a vast belt of grassroots voters long considered a key swing zone.
“This is not just about opening offices; it’s about planting the seeds of a political revolution,” NLP Party Leader Augustus Kyalo Muli declared, promising that no ward in Kenya will be “politically invisible” by the time the 2027 elections arrive.
The double launch is the latest in a whirlwind expansion that has seen NLP grow from its 30th branch in Lari, Kiambu, earlier this year to now commanding presence in over 30 counties. Party insiders say the momentum is far from slowing, with more branch launches already lined up in strategic counties.

Local leaders and residents turned up in droves for the Kitui events, with cheers echoing through the crowd as Kyalo Muli vowed to turn the new offices into “centers of action” where communities can organize, strategize, and demand accountability.
With 36 branches now operational, the NLP is not just joining Kenya’s political race — it’s muscling its way to the front of the pack.

