Jamal Ntutu, the rising aspirant hailed as Westlands’ “incoming MP” in fervent social media circles, has unveiled a transformative manifesto to supercharge the constituency.
Linked to Narok County’s powerhouse Ntutu political dynasty—including Governor Patrick Keturet Ole Ntutu—the young firebrand promises to tackle Nairobi’s urban chaos head-on.

His 10-pillar plan spotlights youth empowerment, infrastructure fixes, and inclusive growth, positioning Westlands as Kenya’s innovation hub.
At the core is a “Youth Jobs & Innovation Explosion.” Ntutu pledges digital bootcamps, startup incubators, and job quotas for Westlands youth in tech, creative, and corporate sectors.
“We’re turning our young population into economic engines,” he declares, eyeing the demographic bulge as Nairobi’s untapped goldmine.
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Traffic woes get no mercy in his “End Traffic Nightmare” push. BRT expansion, smart signals, pedestrian bridges, and upgrades on Waiyaki Way and Muthangari Drive aim to slash commute times.
“Spend time living, not stuck in jam,” Jamal Ntutu urges, evoking the daily gridlock tormenting thousands.
For Kangemi and Mountain View slums, “Dignity” means fast-tracked water, sewer, electricity, secure titles, and zero-tolerance evictions.
Ntutu envisions upgrading informal settlements into “safe, proud communities,” addressing chronic marginalization.
Education reform promises “what actually works”: full bursaries for bright but broke students, modernized public schools, more ECDE centres, and vocational hubs teaching employer-craved skills.
Healthcare follows suit with equipped ward dispensaries, maternal and youth mental health priority, and free basics in underserved spots. “No one dies because they can’t afford care,” he vows.
Safety ramps up via “Safer Streets Day & Night”—solar lights everywhere, community policing, youth anti-crime squads, and CCTV.
Environmentally, “Zero Flooding, Clean Environment” tackles drainage, river rehab, waste enforcement, and tree-planting to end deluges and green the urban sprawl.
Ntutu commits to “Protect & Expand Green Spaces,” guarding Karura Forest edges, creating ward pocket parks, and battling pollution for “breathing space in our concrete jungle.”
CDF transparency demands real-time online tracking, quarterly forums, and equal shares—”no elite capture.”
Finally, “Affordable Living & Economic Inclusion” backs hawkers, boda riders, and small traders; pushes genuine housing; and fights costs. “Making Westlands home for middle and low-income families too.”
