KAMPALA, Uganda — On 15 January 2026, Uganda once again delivered an outcome that has become almost ritual: President Yoweri Museveni was declared the overwhelming victor of a national election, securing 71.65% of the vote against opposition leader Robert “Bobi Wine” Kyagulanyi’s 24.72% in results rejected as fraudulent by the challenger.

For nearly four decades, Museveni, now 81 years old, has mastered the mechanics of electoral politics not solely through campaigning, but through a system of institutional control, regulatory engineering, and socio-political manipulation that keeps his opponents constrained and the status quo intact.

This is not merely the story of another election result, it is a blueprint of how power self-perpetuates in a system that combines incumbency advantage with political repression.

1. The power of the state: Security, media and the law

Unlike conventional democratic contests where the state acts as an impartial referee, Uganda’s state apparatus operates as an active player in Museveni’s corner.

In the 2026 election cycle:

These actions reflect an environment where the security sector, legal constraints, and public order regimes are leveraged not just for public safety, but as political instruments.

2. Incumbency advantage and institutional capture

Museveni’s political longevity is buttressed by systematic alterations to Uganda’s constitutional and regulatory framework that widen the gap between electoral competition and meaningful choice:

  • Term and age limits that once constrained presidents were removed, enabling indefinite incumbency.
  • The National Resistance Movement (NRM) dominates Parliament, shaping legislation and administrative appointments in ways that entrench party supremacy.
  • The Electoral Commission’s independence has been repeatedly questioned, including allegations of obstruction in verification processes and limitations on observers.

In this configuration, the electoral arena is less a neutral playing field and more a controlled political environment where the outcome is heavily conditioned if not predetermined.

3. The illusion of competition: Opposition struggles

Opposition movements, particularly Bobi Wine’s National Unity Platform (NUP), have galvanized a potent base among urban youth and disaffected voters. Their popular energy has shaped Uganda’s political discourse and eroded Museveni’s vote share over successive cycles.

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Yet, this momentum is routinely undercut by systemic barriers:

  • Arbitrary arrests, harassment and beatings of party members during campaigns.
  • Constraints on public assembly and media access that skew voters’ exposure to alternative platforms.
  • Administrative and procedural measures that shape turnout and tally processes to favour incumbents.

The result is a semi-competitive façade: elections that appear contested, yet unfold within margins heavily skewed by structural bias.

4. Fear, patronage and the rural economy

In addition to repression, Museveni’s long rule has sustained patronage networks and economic entanglements that influence voting behaviour:

  • Government projects such as major infrastructure and regional development initiatives have created tangible local beneficiaries whose interests align with continuity.
  • Rural and peripheral regions, consistently delivering large margins for the incumbent, operate within social economies where political loyalty translates to access to agricultural support, jobs and local contracts.

This extended reach into everyday economic life reinforces a perception among many voters that change equals instability, even as disillusionment grows in urban centres.

5. International tolerance and geopolitical realities

Critics note that Western partners often engage Uganda strategically, prioritising security cooperation and regional stability over electoral integrity.

This dynamic dilutes international pressure and creates a diplomatic space in which incumbency endures without substantive accountability.

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Also Read: Love him or loathe him: Museveni’s 40 years in power and the battle to ‘Protect the Gains’

As opposition figures themselves lament, foreign support is sometimes perceived as conditional on stability rather than democracy, inadvertently sustaining systems resistant to deep political reform.

The real truth: Not one factor, but an ecosystem

To understand why Museveni “keeps winning” requires seeing beyond ballots to the ecosystem that shapes them:

  • Institutional dominance over electoral and judicial processes.
  • Security sector leverage that chills dissent.
  • Political patronage that co-opts loyalty.
  • Strategic manipulation of media and civic space.
  • A geopolitical context that prizes stability.

In this complex architecture, victory is not secured on the basis of popular consensus alone. It is the product of a sophisticated blend of power consolidation, narrative control, constrained competition, and socio-economic leverage.

Uganda’s next political chapter will be determined not just by votes, but by whether this architecture can be reformed to allow genuine democratic choice — a choice that the world has watched unfold every five years but seldom interrogates deeply enough.

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Michael Wandati is an accomplished journalist, editor, and media strategist with a keen focus on breaking news, political affairs, and human interest reporting. Michael is dedicated to producing accurate, impactful journalism that informs public debate and reflects the highest standards of editorial integrity.

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