Museveni To Contest In 2026 Polls – VP Alupo


78-year-old President Yoweri Museveni who has been in power for 37 years is very much still around and will contest for power again in the 2026 polls, vice president Jessica Alupo has said.


“From your faces and body language I can see you are ready to give him more time in State House…Pulezidenti Yoweri Kaguta Museveni ajja kuba naffe mu 2026 mu kulonda era wakubawo nga okulonda kuwedde! Nsaba mu muwagile nga mwebadde mukola bulijjo [President Museveni will still be with us in 2026 and he will contest and be there after the elections. Please, support him like you have always done.]” Alupo said in Luganda seemingly driving her point home to an even wider audience.

“So nobody will say the message was not shared. The message is all here, let’s all examine the message and because of those programmes which are not complete, we shall talk to his HE to continue leading us in the implementation of those projects. Lord Bishop, I didn’t intend to make this a rally but I thought I needed to share my small message with the people of the archdeaconry because we pass here every Monday going for meetings. And archdeacon, be prepared every Monday to host me other than driving back to Kampala so that we continue discussing issues which are affecting Christians and finding ways of solving them,” added Alupo.

The assurance comes at a time when Museveni’s own son, Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba is unassailably campaigning in a way many pundits say is doing ground to prepare to take over from the father, come 2026.

Muhoozi’s supporters who the old guard has tried to restrain to avoid “causing confusion” within the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM), assert that it is time for the old guard to give way to a younger generation. NRM notes Muhoozi’s activities and those of his supporters are causing division and schisms within the party support base.

Notable among Muhoozi’s critics are Security minister, Maj Gen Kahinda Otafiire and NRM national mobilizer and former Wakiso Woman MP, Rosemary Ssenninde. Museveni will be making forty years in power in 2026, having taken over power in 1986 following a protracted five-year bush war. Muhoozi has since vowed to “teach a lesson” to the old guard opposed to his political desires.

VP Jessica Alupo receiving a plaque from the archdeaconry
Alupo who urged church leaders and Christians in Entebbe to support the ruling NRM party explained that Entebbe was the gateway of Uganda and it was not proper in terms of political colours for the ground not to be reflective of this. In his written message, Museveni commended the church’s supportive role in helping the population emancipate themselves from poverty. Museveni said Christians should emulate the biblical Joseph, the father of Jesus in the bible to engage in income-generating activities in addition to seeking spiritual well-being.

Museveni said Joseph made his livelihood as a carpenter and did God’s work. The president pledged Shs 60 million towards the completion of the redesign and reconstruction of the archdeaconry church. Before Alupo’s speech, Shyaka Steven Gashaija, the former Entebbe municipality NRM candidate enumerated the government’s achievements in the area and outlined challenges including prevalent land grabbing, poor roads in some places, and rising crime.

Alupo said she was going to report these to the president and they should expect feedback from her soon. She unveiled a plaque to symbolize the kick of the technical works to change the look of the archdeaconry headquarters and also planted a tree in memory of the day.


The event was attended by seven local and international bishops including retired Namirembe diocese head, Bishop Balagadde Ssekkadde who represented his successor Bishop Kityo Luwalira to lead the service. Others included retired bishops George Ssennabulya (Mityana), Eria Paul Luzinda (Mukono), Jackson Matovu (West Buganda), and reigning bishop Samuel Egesa (Bukedi diocese).

Foreign bishops included Samuel Azeofa from Nigeria and Felix Odei Annancy of Ghana who preached on occasion. Bishop Odei told Christians to audit whether they had done enough in helping Jesus Christ spread the gospel.

“When you look at the population of Entebbe, can you say we have done enough in the thirty-five years?”

Canon John Ggita Kavuma, the archdeacon of Entebbe explained that they need Shs 1.1 billion to complete the facelift of the headquarter of the archdeaconry to befit the status of the area. He also reminded the vice president of the president’s pledge of a vehicle, adding that he always borrowed one to do ministry.

Entebbe archdeaconry was curved out of Nateete archdeaconry on January 4, 1987. The archdeaconry comprises nine parishes and about 60 churches in a territory running from Namasuba in Kampala all the way up to Kalangala islands. The parishes include Entebbe, Ssese, St John (near State House), Nkumba, Kitenda, Jjuungo, and Nankinga (Zana). Other archdeaconries with which Entebbe constitutes Namirembe diocese include Luzira, Nateete, Gayaza, Mengo, Kazo, and Namirembe deanery.

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