Farouk Kibet: A man with immense clout but no constitutional office
Opinion
By
Kinuthia Njoroge
| Apr 07, 2026
President Ruto's aide Farouk Kibet during the women empowerment programme at Scott Christian University in Machakos town on June 6, 2025. [John Muia, Standard]
Our democracy struggles to accommodate the potentate type; the man who wields enormous power without having ever sought a single vote. Farouk Teigut Kibet is one such man, and the furious, often unhinged attempts to cut him down to size are the clearest confirmation yet that his influence is real, growing, and frankly, unsettling to many career politicians.
Kibet, regarded as the most influential unelected official in Kenya, enjoys unfettered access to President William Ruto and manages his diary and logistical arrangements. Despite holding no elective office, his influence swamps that of topmost government functionaries.
That's no mean achievement in a country where constitutional offices come with motorcades, allowances, and the heady feeling of personal importance. For over two decades, Kibet has been a loyal assistant to Ruto and has climbed up the ladder to become an influential figure that many compare with Nicholas Biwott, who served in President Daniel arap Moi's government.
Biwott held ministerial portfolios, but his real power was informal; proximity to power and the capacity to act as a presidential extension. History has its precedents for this archetype: Pierre-Louis Roederer, who managed Napoleon Bonaparte's political affairs from the shadows; Sherman Adams, Dwight Eisenhower's Chief of Staff, who governed through access, rather than rank.
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What distinguishes Kibet's recent trajectory is his transformation from the invisible operative to a visible party engine. Behind the scenes, Kibet and Dennis Itumbi ran what insiders describe as an intense, village-by-village grassroots machine that delivered UDA victories in the November 2025 and February 2026 by-elections.
In Western Kenya, Kibet's ability to speak Luhya fluently allowed him to connect with both elders, women and youth groups. He is credited with creating harmony between local leaders, calming rival groups and ensuring that the President's message reached even the smallest gatherings. Speaker Moses Wetang'ula publicly acknowledged Kibet's foundational role in building the Kenya Kwanza coalition.
The senior politicians who now bristle at Kibet's profile owe him part of the offices they currently occupy. Which is precisely why attacks on Kibet are so revealing. Saboti MP Caleb Amisi publicly accused Kibet of upstaging Mudavadi, Wetang'ula, and former Kakamega Governor Oparanya by presiding over fundraising events in Western Kenya, yet he held no public office.
Rigathi Gachagua went further, describing Kibet as a ‘co-president’ and claiming that the Inspector General of Police, Cabinet ministers, and the Head of Public Service were answerable to him. These are criticisms from people who resent his influence.
In early March 2026, a forgery, a fake presidential letter purporting to expel Kibet from State House, went viral on social media. A separate fake DCI press release claimed Kibet was wanted for questioning over alleged criminal activities and that a Sh20 million reward had been offered for his whereabouts.
Both fabrications were debunked within hours. Their sheer creativity, however, tells you that someone fears this man enough to manufacture his downfall. What Kibet does, viewed through a political science lens, is a masterclass in soft power accumulation through relational capital.
His public remarks are notably measured. At a function in Narok last Friday, he urged retired President Uhuru Kenyatta to offer guidance instead of trying to undermine Ruto's government. In a political culture addicted to the cheap adrenaline of insults, that kind of self-restraint is its own form of dominance.
What is Kibet's endgame? Whether he eventually converts influence into an elective bid, or whether he remains the indispensable architect behind another Ruto term, may depend on how Kenya's political culture responds to the current charged stimuli. Nevertheless, a man who wields more real power than those who have collected millions of votes doesn't really need an elective office. Those who've tried to diminish Kibet through smear campaigns know this.