When Dr Fred Matiang’i and Kalonzo Musyoka made their separate visits to Bondo to mourn Raila Odinga, the politics walked right in with them — even before the speeches began. The contrast was subtle, humorous, telling, and hard to ignore.

Matiang’i, who is carefully re-emerging as the likely face of a Jubilee revival, arrived with a small, composed delegation. His tone was low–heat and respectful, the kind that suggests someone easing himself back into national conversation after a long winter. But what became the subject of roadside commentary was his gift: bananas. Simple, cultural, Kisii to the core — but undeniably humble. To his loyalists, this was authenticity and rootedness. To his critics, it only added kerosene to an old rumour: “Matiang’i ni mchoyo, hata kwa matanga.” The jokes wrote themselves before the speeches ended.
Kalonzo’s entry played differently. He showed up with a larger entourage, a caravan of visible political company. And then came the talk of the 100 cattle donated in Raila’s honour — a gesture loud enough to echo across the Luo Nyanza plains. It was generous, symbol-laden and unmistakably strategic. Kalonzo has not given up the future; he is still auditioning for it. In public grief, he found a stage for messaging: loyalty, capacity, readiness.
The contrast was amplified by the fact that the two did not arrive together. Once allies in crafting a united opposition front — sometimes seen quietly co-ordinating strategy, sometimes floating in the same political WhatsApp orbit — they have recently begun to drift apart. The effort to fashion a single, coherent opposition banner has been slowed by timing, ambition and the question of who, exactly, stands at the front of the parade.
Kalonzo has remained close to the centre of opposition politics, staking his claim in the post-Raila horizon and insisting that patience eventually pays. Matiang’i, meanwhile, has been rebuilding himself away from the spotlight, careful about every return step — aware that missteps are costly when memories are still fresh.

In Bondo, the symbolism was unmistakable:Kalonzo gifted cattle — a promise of continuity and strength.
Matiang’i brought bananas — a nod to simplicity and roots, but also a reminder that he is still calibrating his re-entry.

The mourning was genuine. The affection for Raila was real.But the politics hovered — polite, wordless, and expressive.
Two men, once aligned in purpose, now walking parallel lines that are no longer touching — at least for now.
