By Mulengera Reporters
The battle lines are drawn. Uganda is officially on the road to what promises to be one of the most consequential elections in its history, as the Electoral Commission (EC) announces January 15, 2026 as the final date for the presidential polls.
EC Chairperson Justice Simon Byabakama confirmed the much-anticipated date at a press briefing in Kampala, declaring the clock ticking for a political contest that has gripped the nation and may very well reshape it.
At the heart of this high-stakes race are two towering figures: President Yoweri Museveni, the veteran leader who has ruled Uganda since 1986, and Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu, famously known as Bobi Wine, the opposition firebrand whose message of change has electrified Uganda’s youth and rattled the establishment.
The announcement comes after months of speculation, campaign trail drama, and rising tensions.
With nominations completed and campaigns in full swing since October, Uganda is now heading into the most charged phase of its electoral calendar.
Parliamentary and local government elections will follow in the weeks after the presidential vote.
Eight candidates are in the race, but all eyes are on the Museveni–Bobi Wine face-off a generational clash between continuity and change, old guard and new wave, power and protest.
Museveni, representing the ruling National Resistance Movement (NRM), is seeking yet another term, insisting his leadership remains critical for Uganda’s stability and development.
In contrast, Bobi Wine, leading the National Unity Platform (NUP), has promised to dismantle what he calls a dictatorship and return power to the people.
Other contenders include seasoned opposition leaders like Mugisha Muntu (ANT), Nandala Mafabi (FDC), and Joseph Mabirizi (CP), adding complexity to an already intense race.
As the nation prepares for this decisive vote, the EC has urged calm, discipline, and peaceful participation.
But with a history of contested elections, the 2026 vote comes loaded with both promise and peril.
Whether Uganda will witness continuity or an electoral upset of historic proportions remains to be seen but one thing is clear: the ultimate showdown is coming.
























