As Christians and Kenyans enter into festive season to mark the birth of Jesus Christ(Christmas), former Secretary General Kenya Union of Civil Servants Dr. Isaac Newton Kinity has issued a strong worded message both of festive wishes as well as a call to Kenyans to reflect on the kind of leadership they want moving forward towards 2027.
In the message to Kenyans, the former unionist reminded Kenyans of his stand on matters good governance and the fight against corruption.

He pointed out that as the year 2025 comes to an end, Kenyans should reflect on matters governance and chat way forward.
Dr.Kinity who has been on record since January this year calling out bad governance and corrupt leaders whom he termed as enemies of development, has reiterated that time is now that Kenyans should stop recycling leaders.
According to him, Kenyans should elect leaders of integrity who have no any sign of corruption record.
He believes that Kenya’s problems can only be addressed by having a right leader in place- a leader who has the interests of the people at heart.
“Kenya’s problems cannot be solved by cosmetic reforms, cabinet reshuffles, youth tokenism, or arrests of small fish. In fact, unemployment, poor healthcare, failing education, land grabbing, police brutality, abductions, and investor harassment all trace back to one root cause entrenched corruption protected by power and force,” he stated.
Dr. Kinity is a leader whose consistent message has crystallized into a clear proposal: that Kenya must confront, arrest, prosecute, jail, and dispossess a small group of powerful individuals who have captured the state.

In his Chrismas message to Kenyans, he argues that Kenya cannot change without dismantling corruption at the highest level.
“This is my message to all 2027 presidential aspirants, including those courting Gen Z, that no meaningful reform is possible without confronting those who enjoy total impunity,” he said.
Positioning himself as a voice that has refused to dilute the truth for political convenience has seen him have good rapport with many Kenyans.

This year alone, a number of groups endorsed Dr. Kinity as a potential presidential candidate.
The groups include members of the Akorino Church who gathered in Kenol, Murang’a, to pray for him, signaling support rooted in moral and spiritual conviction rather than transactional politics.
Youth groups across the country have echoed his anti-corruption message, drawn to his refusal to patronize or trivialize their grievances. Voices from Kisii and other regions have also expressed alignment with his stance.