With just days to the official close of presidential nominations, tensions between the National Unity Platform (NUP) and the Electoral Commission (EC) have once again thrust Uganda’s election credibility into the spotlight.
On Friday evening, the EC formally notified NUP leader Robert Kyagulanyi, better known as Bobi Wine, that his submitted list of supporters had fallen short of legal requirements in at least 18 districts. The letter, signed by EC chairperson Justice Simon Byabakama, concluded that while Kyagulanyi had presented signatures from 130 districts, only 80 met the threshold.
The ruling effectively places Bobi Wine’s nomination bid in jeopardy, unless he can urgently supply fresh endorsements before the September 24 deadline.
A Familiar Battlefield
For Bobi Wine and his supporters, the Commission’s move is not simply procedural. It is political.
“This is incompetence and partiality at its peak,” Kyagulanyi said in a statement. “We submitted more than enough signatures, but they are just trying to frustrate us. Security operatives have been intimidating our supporters into disowning their signatures, and the EC is complicit.”
Such accusations are not new. In the 2021 election cycle, NUP repeatedly accused the EC of operating as an appendage of the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM). The latest dispute fits into a long-running narrative that the Commission cannot be trusted to referee fairly when President Museveni’s incumbency is at stake.
Protest Vote and the Politics of Fear
NUP frames these obstacles as evidence that the regime is rattled by what Kyagulanyi calls the “protest vote” — the groundswell of support from citizens disenchanted with four decades of NRM rule.
Analysts note that the EC’s handling of nomination procedures will likely shape public confidence in the polls. “When the Commission is seen to delay communication or reject signatures without full transparency, it feeds into opposition claims of bias,” says a Kampala-based political commentator. “This erodes trust in the process before campaigns even begin.”
A Contest Beyond Signatures
The controversy is not just about paperwork. It is about momentum. For Bobi Wine, securing nomination is the first test of whether the state will allow a genuine contest in 2026. Any perceived hurdle becomes a rallying point for his supporters, who see their struggle less as an election and more as a movement for liberation.
NUP has already called on registered voters in the affected districts to flock to its Makerere-Kavule headquarters on Saturday morning to re-submit signatures. The party is also mobilizing supporters for two major rallies immediately after nomination, setting the stage for a direct face-off with Museveni, whose camp will hold its post-nomination event at Kololo.
The Bigger Question
For the EC, the episode underscores the delicate balancing act it faces: enforcing the law while trying to maintain legitimacy in the eyes of an increasingly skeptical public. Each procedural dispute chips away at that legitimacy.
As Uganda edges closer to the 2026 elections, the battle over signatures is less about numbers than about narratives — and which of the two leading contenders, Museveni or Bobi Wine, can convince the public that they are the rightful custodian of the people’s will.With just days to the official close of presidential nominations, tensions between the National Unity Platform (NUP) and the Electoral Commission (EC) have once again thrust Uganda’s election credibility into the spotlight.
On Friday evening, the EC formally notified NUP leader Robert Kyagulanyi, better known as Bobi Wine, that his submitted list of supporters had fallen short of legal requirements in at least 18 districts. The letter, signed by EC chairperson Justice Simon Byabakama, concluded that while Kyagulanyi had presented signatures from 130 districts, only 80 met the threshold.
The ruling effectively places Bobi Wine’s nomination bid in jeopardy, unless he can urgently supply fresh endorsements before the September 24 deadline.
A Familiar Battlefield
For Bobi Wine and his supporters, the Commission’s move is not simply procedural. It is political.
“This is incompetence and partiality at its peak,” Kyagulanyi said in a statement. “We submitted more than enough signatures, but they are just trying to frustrate us. Security operatives have been intimidating our supporters into disowning their signatures, and the EC is complicit.”
Such accusations are not new. In the 2021 election cycle, NUP repeatedly accused the EC of operating as an appendage of the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM). The latest dispute fits into a long-running narrative that the Commission cannot be trusted to referee fairly when President Museveni’s incumbency is at stake.
Protest Vote and the Politics of Fear
NUP frames these obstacles as evidence that the regime is rattled by what Kyagulanyi calls the “protest vote” — the groundswell of support from citizens disenchanted with four decades of NRM rule.
Analysts note that the EC’s handling of nomination procedures will likely shape public confidence in the polls. “When the Commission is seen to delay communication or reject signatures without full transparency, it feeds into opposition claims of bias,” says a Kampala-based political commentator. “This erodes trust in the process before campaigns even begin.”
A Contest Beyond Signatures
The controversy is not just about paperwork. It is about momentum. For Bobi Wine, securing nomination is the first test of whether the state will allow a genuine contest in 2026. Any perceived hurdle becomes a rallying point for his supporters, who see their struggle less as an election and more as a movement for liberation.
NUP has already called on registered voters in the affected districts to flock to its Makerere-Kavule headquarters on Saturday morning to re-submit signatures. The party is also mobilizing supporters for two major rallies immediately after nomination, setting the stage for a direct face-off with Museveni, whose camp will hold its post-nomination event at Kololo.
The Bigger Question
For the EC, the episode underscores the delicate balancing act it faces: enforcing the law while trying to maintain legitimacy in the eyes of an increasingly skeptical public. Each procedural dispute chips away at that legitimacy.
As Uganda edges closer to the 2026 elections, the battle over signatures is less about numbers than about narratives — and which of the two leading contenders, Museveni or Bobi Wine, can convince the public that they are the rightful custodian of the people’s will.