Political temperatures soared in Kitui South on Saturday after the National Liberal Party (NLP) staged a daring offensive deep inside Wiper Party’s heartland, setting off shockwaves that are now rippling across the Lower Eastern region.

In a well-coordinated operation in Kitui South , NLP unleashed a massive caravan that swept through villages, markets, and trading centers, rallying residents to join its ongoing countrywide registration drive. The caravan — vibrant, defiant, and heavily branded — caught many local leaders off-guard, marking the first major attempt to directly challenge Wiper’s longtime stranglehold on the region.

“Enough is enough. For decades, Wiper leaders have promised change, but poverty, unemployment, and hopelessness still reign supreme. NLP is here to end the betrayal,” declared a fired-up NLP official during a rally in Mutomo town.
The offensive is part of NLP’s larger political strategy to erode Wiper’s dominance ahead of the 2027 general elections, aggressively recruiting thousands of new members — particularly targeting young people and frustrated voters who feel abandoned by the status quo.

Political insiders confirm that panic has already gripped Wiper’s local machinery, with emergency meetings reportedly convened to counter the growing NLP influence. Sources close to the Wiper leadership admitted the Kitui South offensive was unexpected and could trigger a realignment if not checked early.
“This was supposed to be a no-go zone. The fact that NLP is being warmly received here is a red flag that Wiper cannot ignore,” said a political analyst based in Kitui.
NLP’s surprise move comes as part of a broader Lower Eastern onslaught, with active registration campaigns already stirring political waters in Makueni, Machakos, and Kitui Central.
The party’s youthful energy, strategic messaging, and aggressive grassroots engagement are being seen as a new force that could scramble the traditional Ukambani political landscape.

As the NLP caravan now heads deeper into remote areas of Kitui South — including Ikutha, Kanziko, and Mutha — senior party officials have promised even bigger rallies and “earth-shaking political declarations” in the coming days.
The political fireworks have just begun — and the once-calm Wiper stronghold is suddenly anything but secure.

