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Further, respondents voted for Ramadhan as the most preferred candidate who lacks bias, while only 18% voted for Amadi under the same criteria. 24% of the respondents preferred Nyachae and 30% preferred Ethekon.
However, a majority (55%) of Kenyans are not confident that the vetting was merit-based, with many maintaining that public trust over the process has been strongly influenced by the credibility of past elections.
“Those who believe previous elections were fair tend to trust the current process, while those who view past elections as flawed express deep skepticism,” added TIFA.
This comes amid calls to fill critical positions in the national electoral body