As Ugandans head to the ballot to decide whether President Yoweri Museveni extends his four-decade grip on power, the outcome is being followed closely in Nairobi. This is not about politics alone. For Kenya, Uganda’s election is a test of stability along one of East Africa’s most critical economic lifelines.
A Corridor Kenya Cannot Afford to Lose
The Mombasa–Kampala corridor is more than a highway. It is the backbone of trade between Kenya and Uganda. About 85 per cent of goods destined for Uganda pass through the Port of Mombasa, making Kampala Kenya’s single most important regional trading partner.
So far, transporters have kept trucks moving. The Kenya Transporters Association (KTA) says operations remain normal after assurances from Ugandan authorities on security during the vote. Still, caution hangs in the air.
“Insecurity is unlikely on voting day itself,” said KTA chief executive Mercy Ireri. “The concern is what happens after the ballots are cast.”
Her caution reflects hard-earned experience in a region where post-election disputes, not polling day, often trigger disruptions.
Museveni, Bobi Wine and the Question of Continuity
President Museveni is widely expected to retain power, backed by the long-dominant National Resistance Movement. Yet the campaign has not been quiet. Opposition groups have complained of disrupted rallies and heavy security presence.
The most visible challenger is Robert Kyagulanyi, better known as Bobi Wine. The 43-year-old pop star-turned-politician carries the hopes of younger voters frustrated by unemployment and corruption. In 2021, he secured 35 percent of the vote before withdrawing a court challenge to Museveni’s victory, citing lack of fairness in the process.
Uganda’s law allows presidential results to be challenged at the Supreme Court. That legal window is one reason businesses fear post-election uncertainty more than election day itself.
Why Uganda Matters to Kenya’s Economy
Beyond politics, geography binds the two economies. Uganda is landlocked. Kenya is its gateway to the sea. That reality anchors trade, logistics, and investment between the two countries.
Kenya mainly exports manufactured goods to Uganda, including cement, iron and steel products, and processed oils. Uganda sends back agricultural produce such as maize, tea, coffee, and ceramics. The flow has grown steadily and diversified over time.
In August 2025, Uganda ranked as Kenya’s top export destination. Goods worth Sh11 billion crossed the border that month, outpacing exports to the United States. For the full year 2024, Kenya’s exports to Uganda were valued at about $936 million.
Transit Trade Keeps Rising
The Northern Corridor tells the same story. Transit cargo through Mombasa rose by 16 percent in the first half of 2025, reaching 7.37 million tonnes. Uganda absorbed nearly 70 percent of that volume.
Cargo destined for Uganda jumped by 33 percent to 5.1 million tonnes. Burundi and Rwanda also recorded growth, while volumes to South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo fell.
To keep up, Kenya Ports Authority has accelerated automation and infrastructure upgrades. The goal is simple: faster clearance, fewer delays, and smoother regional trade.
More Than an Election
For Kenya, Uganda’s election is not just a democratic exercise across the border. It is a moment that tests the resilience of trade routes, supply chains, and regional cooperation.
Stability in Uganda keeps trucks moving, ports busy, and factories supplied. Any disruption, even temporary, would ripple through Kenya’s economy. That is why Nairobi is watching closely—not with ballots, but with balance sheets, cargo manifests, and a keen eye on what comes after the vote.















