The Pre-Election Coverage by Kenyan Newspapers March Monitoring Report THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 1

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The Pre-Election Coverage by Kenyan Newspapers March 2012 Monitoring Report THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 1

Published by: Media Council of Kenya P.O. Box 43132 00100 Nairobi, Kenya Ground Floor, British American Insurance Centre Mara/Ragati Road Junction, Upper Hill Tel: +254 (020) 272 5032, 2737058 Mobile: +254 727 735252 Email: info@mediacouncil.or.ke Website: www.mediacouncil.or.ke Media Council of Kenya, 2012 2 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

The Pre-Election Coverage By Kenyan Newspapers March 2012 Monitoring Report Media Council of Kenya THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 3

4 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

Table of Content List of Figures Preface Acknowledgements vi vii viii 1. Executive Summary 1 2. Project Description: Monitoring Pre-Election Coverage 2 2.1. Objective, Data Collection and Analysis 2 3. Findings 2 3.1. General Observations 2 3.2. Adherence to the Code of Conduct 3 3.3. Accuracy and Balance 3 3.4. Distinction Comment and Facts 5 3.5. Hate Speech 5 3.6. Obscenity 5 3.7. Gender Balance 5 3.8. Allocation of space 8 3.9. Tonality of Coverage 9 3.10. Topics of Coverage 11 4. Conclusions and Recommendations 12 5. Appendix 13 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 5 v

List of Figures Figure 1: Number of Viewpoints in News Reports 3 Figure 2: Viewpoints per Media House 4 Figure 3: W/H Answers in News Reports 5 Figure 4: Gender of Author 6 Figure 5: Gender per Media House 6 Figure 6: Gender Presence in Articles 7 Figure 7: Gender Presence per Media House 7 Figure 8. Coverage of Politicians 8 Figure 9: Coverage per Media House 9 Figure 10: Tonality of Coverage 10 Figure 11: Tonality per Media House 10 Figure 12: Topics of Coverage 11 6 vi THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

Preface The study The Pre-Election Coverage by Kenyan Newspapers is the first monitoring report that the Media Council of Kenya publishes ahead of the General Election in (presumably) March 2013. More monthly reports on the performance of print and electronic media will follow. The aim of this paper is to analyze the adherence of the print media to the Guidelines of Election Coverage that the Media Council of Kenya has developed in cooperation with many other media stakeholders. The guidelines are aimed at helping journalists to provide comprehensive, accurate, impartial, balanced and fair coverage of the elections. By sharing media monitoring results on a regular basis, such as this report, the Media Council wants to ensure that the media houses can rectify negative trends in order to contribute to a free, fair and democratic election process which enables citizens to make informed choices. Haron Mwangi Executive Director Media Council of Kenya THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS vii 7

Acknowledgements The Media Council of Kenya (MCK) wishes to thank all those, who contributed to this report. We particularly want to acknowledge the work of the MCK monitoring team: Immaculate Mwende Abraham Kisang Allennita Gakii Njeri Munyiri Ahmed Kassim We also want to thank Isabel Rodde, Technical Adviser GIZ, for the supervision of the project. We finally also acknowledge the support of the German Development Cooperation GIZ / Civil Peace Service, without which this project would not have been possible. 8 viii THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

1. Executive Summary The Media Council of Kenya (MCK), the statutory body established under the Media Act 2007 which regulates media and advances professionalism of the media in Kenya, monitored the political coverage of Kenyan daily newspapers in March 2012 in order to assess the quality and fairness of their pre-election coverage. Key Findings The political coverage was predominantly personality- and not issue-driven. Differences reported between parties or politicians were limited to debates about political alliances and the approval or rejection of the 2013 election date. The most frequently covered presidential candidates were Raila Odinga, Uhuru Kenyatta, William Ruto and Musalia Mudavadi. The activities of other aspirants were rarely considered to be newsworthy. Election issues dominated the political coverage, although the polls are still many months ahead. Nearly 2/3 of the lead stories on page 1 were devoted to election matters. While calling for calm in their editorials, some dailies contributed to heightening tensions by reporting unconfirmed rumours and using sensational headlines. More than a quarter of all news reports presented only one viewpoint. This was due to the extensive coverage of individual political rallies, only reporting one political point of view. The reporting about IEBC s setting of the poll date for March 4, 2013 failed to provide legal background analysis of the various political points of view discussed. Hate speech was not encountered as a significant breach of the code of conduct. Only a very few articles contained negative stereotypes. Political coverage is still a male domain. Women were clearly underrepresented both as authors and as news subjects. Only 7% of the authors were female, and only 4% of the articles focused on women. Recommendations The Media Council of Kenya in cooperation with Editors Guild, Kenya Union of Journalists, Kenya Correspondents Association, Media Owners Association, Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission and the National Cohesion and Integration Commission has published Guidelines for Election Coverage to ensure the proper coverage of elections in order to enable citizens to make an informed choice. In adherence to these guidelines, the press must provide a balanced and impartial (pre-) election coverage, which includes a fair coverage of minor parties and candidates, well sourced reports based on sound evidence and the careful use of language to help reduce tension between parties. THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 91

2. Project Description Monitoring Pre-Election Coverage 2.1 Objective, Data Collection and Analysis MCK observed the coverage of parties and politicians by the Daily Nation, The Standard, The Star and The People Newspaper from March 17 31, 2012. All major articles (quarter page and longer, n=276) mentioning any of the presidential candidates and/or their parties were analyzed with regard to their adherence to the code of conduct and quality and fairness of reporting. 81% of items monitored were news reports, 3% features and 15% opinion pieces. Data was entered into MCK s digital media portal using Enhanced Evaluation software. Statistical analysis was carried out with SPSS version 17.0. 3. Findings 3.1 General Observations The dominant political topics covered from March 17 31, 2012 included the debate on the election date, the controversy about ODM s nomination rules for the presidential candidate, the GEMA meeting in Limuru and the cabinet reshuffle. The most frequently mentioned politicians were Raila Odinga, Uhuru Kenyatta, William Ruto and Musalia Mudavadi. The activities of most other presidential candidates were only rarely considered as newsworthy. 1 Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto received extensive coverage during their second round of prayer meetings following the confirmation of charges by the International Criminal Court in The Hague. Kenyatta was also mentioned in connection with the GEMA meeting in which the participants declared him the political leader of Central Kenya. Raila Odinga and Musalia Mudavadi made news because of their controversy about the ODM presidential candidacy. Odinga was also extensively covered with regard to his criticism on the election date set by the IEBC. The political coverage was predominantly personality- and not issue-driven. The politicians received significantly more mentions than their parties. There was no coverage of party manifestos or any other content-based differences between the parties. Party differences discussed in the print media were limited to the approval or rejection of the 2013 election date. Taking into account that the elections are still many months ahead, the daily press clearly contributed to hyping the topic. Nearly 2/3 of the lead stories on page 1 were devoted to election matters. While calling for calm in their editorials, the dailies contributed to heightening 1 Articles like Busy week as presidential hopefuls up their game (Standard 25, 2012), covering the activities of Mudavadi, Karua, Camencu, Kenneth, Saitoti, Musyimi, Tuju and Kiyiapi were a rare exception. 10 2 THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

tension by reporting unconfirmed rumours 2 and using sensational headlines such as Election Countdown 3. 3.2 Adherence to the Code of Conduct 6% of all articles were classified as containing breaches of the Code of Conduct, whereas 94% adhered to the rules of the code. 3.3 Accuracy and Balance 40% of all news reports provided answers to all six W/H questions (Who? What? Where? When? Why? How?), whereas 5% only answered three of the questions. 21% of all news reports referred to only one source, 19% to two sources, and 60% to more than two sources. 27% of all news reports presented only one viewpoint. Figure 1 Number of Viewpoints in News Reports 50 40 30 20 10 0 1 2 3 >3 n=223 The People and the Daily Nation scored highest regarding the diversity of viewpoints covered in the news: 70% of the news reports analyzed in The People and 65% of the reports in the Daily Nation presented more than 3 viewpoints. 77% of the reports in The Star and 38% in The Standard only provided one point of view. One reason for that was the extensive coverage of individual political rallies, only reporting one political viewpoint. 2 On March 22, The Standard titled on p.4: IEBC officials accuse Raila, Midiwo of intimidation. On the same day the Daily Nation reported that IEBC had denied this accusation. Only on March 23, The Standard reported IEBC s confirmation that there was no threat but disagreement about the election date. On the same day The Star titled Uhuru, Ruto to support Mudavadi. The lead article on p.1 was largely based on anonymous sources. 3 See Standard March 21, p.1 THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 11 3

Figure 2 80 Viewpoints, n= 223 >3 1 2 3 60 40 20 0 Daily Nation Standard Star The People Newspaper Viewpoints in News Reports In addition to this trend, 53% of The Star reports, 23% of The Standard reports, 9% of The People reports and 4% of the Daily Nation reports referred to only one source. The Standard scored highest with regard to the completeness of information. 93% of all Standard news reports answered all 6 W/H questions, compared to only 3% in The People newspaper. 12 4 THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

Figure 3 100 80 Number W/H Answers n=223 2 3 4 5 6 60 40 20 0 Daily Nation Standard Star The People Newspaper Number of W/H Answers in News Reports 3.4 Distinction between comment and facts The vast majority of articles didn t mix editorial comment and facts. 96 % of all news reports didn t contain any journalistic opinion, whereas 2% contained a small portion (<20%) and 1% a higher portion (>20%) of journalistic opinion. 3.5 Hate Speech 98% of all articles observed contained no hate speech. 3.6 Obscenity None of the articles observed contained obscene language or images. 3.7 Gender Balance The vast majority of articles were written by men (74%), only 7% of the authors were female. Due to male dominated party politics and the prevailing absence of female presidential candidates, men were central subjects in 90% of all the articles observed. Only 4% of the articles focused on women. THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 135

Figure 4 80 Gender of Author 60 40 20 0 male female both (n.a.) n=276 Figure 5 100 80 Author Gender, n=276 n.a both female male 60 40 20 0 Daily Nation Standard Star The People Newspaper Gender of Author 14 6 THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

There were significantly more articles by female journalists in The People Newspaper than in the other dailies (17%); The Daily Nation presented more women as central subjects of the article (7%) than the other papers (e.g. Standard 1,3%). Figure 6 Gender Presence 100 80 60 40 20 Figure 7 0 100 80 men central women central Both women and men equally central n=276 (n.a.) Gender Presence n=276 n.a both central women central men central 60 40 20 0 Daily Nation Standard Star The People Newspaper Gender Presence THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 157

3.8 Allocation of space Raila Odinga was the most prominently covered politician in all newspapers (30% of coverage of all politicians observed), followed by Uhuru Kenyatta (18%), William Ruto (11%) and Musalia Mudavadi (10%). Kalonzo Musyoka, Eugene Wamalwa and Martha Karua received 3% coverage each, whereas Peter Kenneth, Raphael Tuju and Paul Muite were presented in only 1% of the articles analyzed. The coverage focused on politicians rather than on parties. Less than 20% of the political coverage was allocated to parties. ODM received the highest amount of party coverage (55%), followed by the G7 Alliance (16%), KANU (10%), PNU (9%) and NARC Kenya (6%). Figure 8 100 80 60 40 20 0 Odinga Kenyatta Ruto Mudavadi Coverage of Politician (%) n=276 Musyoka Wamalwa Karua Saitoti Kenneth Tuju Abdikadir Muite The People allocated the highest amount of coverage to Raila Odinga (33%), followed by Daily Nation (32%), The Standard (28%) and The Star (25%). Uhuru Kenyatta received 22% coverage in the Star, 18% in the Daily Nation and The Standard and only 8% in The People. 16 8 THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

Figure 9 40 Kenyatta Ruto Odinga 30 20 10 0 DN PEOPLE STAR STD Coverage of Politicians 3.9 Tonality of Coverage 70% of the overall coverage of Raila Odinga was classified as neutral, whereas 21% was positive and 18% negative. The reporting about Uhuru Kenyatta was classified to be 68% neutral, 13% positive and 14% negative. The coverage of Martha Karua was analyzed as the most positive one: 60% of the mentions were classified as neutral whereas 24% were positive and 5% negative. THE THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 179

Figure 10 100 80 Tonality Negative Neutral Positive 60 40 20 0 Odinga Kenyatta Ruto Mudavadi Karua Musyoka Tonality of Coverage There was no significant, continuous bias encountered in the coverage of the different newspapers. However, it was obvious that The People s coverage of Kenyatta didn t contain any negative tonality. Figure 11 100 80 Neutral Negative Positive 60 40 20 0 STD-Kenyatta DN-Kenyatta STAR-Kenyatta People-Kenyatta DN-Odinga STD-Odinga People-Odinga STAR-Odinga Tonality of Coverage 18 10 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

3.10 Topics of Coverage The pre-election coverage focused on election issues (e.g. the election date), general national politics (political alliances and the cabinet reshuffle) and the ICC. Viewpoints and political concepts in the fields of economy, education, land issues and security were not significant issues. Figure 12 60 Topics of Coverage 50 40 30 20 10 0 General Election Issues General National Politics ICC Education Economy/Employment Land issues Security Infrastructure THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 19 11

4. Conclusions and Recommendations The political coverage was predominantly personality- and not issue-driven. Differences reported between parties or politicians were limited to debates about political alliances and the approval or rejection of the 2013 election date. The most frequently covered politicians were Raila Odinga, Uhuru Kenyatta, William Ruto and Musalia Mudavadi. The activities of other presidential candidates were rarely considered as newsworthy. The daily press contributed to hyping election matters beyond reasonable proportion. More than 60% of the lead stories on page 1 were devoted to election issues. Reporting unconfirmed rumours and publishing sensational headlines added to the unnecessary heightening of tensions. More than a quarter of all news reports presented only one viewpoint. This was due to the extensive coverage of individual political rallies, only reporting one political point of view. The extensive reporting about IEBC s setting of the poll date for March 4 failed to provide legal background analysis of the various political points of view discussed. Political coverage is still a male domain. Women were clearly underrepresented both as authors and as news subjects. Only 7% of the authors were female and only 4% of the articles focused on women. Hate speech was not encountered as a significant breach of the code of conduct. Only a very few articles contained negative stereotypes or ethnically based sarcasm. The Media Council of Kenya in cooperation with Editors Guild, Kenya Union of Journalists, Kenya Correspondents Association, Media Owners Association, Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission and the National Cohesion and Integration Commission has published Guidelines for Election Coverage to ensure the proper coverage of elections in order to empower citizens to make an informed choice. In compliance with these guidelines, the press must provide a balanced and impartial (pre-) election coverage, which includes a fair coverage of minor parties and candidates, well sourced reports based on sound evidence, and the careful use of language to help reduce tension between parties. Fair and balanced coverage also means that individual stories and their patterns over a period of time should reflect the views of different parties or candidates. 20 12 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

5. Appendix Tables All Articles Sample of Articles Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid Daily Nation 69 25,0 25,0 25,0 Standard 76 27,5 27,5 52,5 Star 56 20,3 20,3 72,8 The People Newspaper 75 27,2 27,2 100,0 Total 276 100,0 100,0 Format of Article Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid Feature 8 2,9 2,9 2,9 News 223 80,8 80,8 83,7 Opinion 40 14,5 14,5 98,2 Other 5 1,8 1,8 100,0 Total 276 100,0 100,0 Frequency of Breaches Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid No 259 93,8 93,8 93,8 Yes 17 6,2 6,2 100,0 Total 276 100,0 100,0 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 21 13

Gender of Author Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid (n.a.) 48 17,4 17,4 17,4 both 6 2,2 2,2 19,6 female 19 6,9 6,9 26,4 male 203 73,6 73,6 100,0 Total 276 100,0 100,0 Gender Presence Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid (n.a.) 11 4,0 4,0 4,0 Both women and men equally central 7 2,5 2,5 6,5 Man central 248 89,9 89,9 96,4 Woman central 10 3,6 3,6 100,0 Total 276 100,0 100,0 Hate Speech Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid negative stereotypes or insults 2,7,7,7 no hate speech 271 98,2 98,2 98,9 ridicule or sarcasm 3 1,1 1,1 100,0 Total 276 100,0 100,0 22 14 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

Headlines Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid Alarming 3 1,1 1,1 1,1 Descriptive, informative 270 97,8 97,8 98,9 Does not reflect the story 2,7,7 99,6 Provocative 1,4,4 100,0 Total 276 100,0 100,0 Identification of Sources Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid (n.a.) 3 1,1 1,1 1,1 Sources explicitly identified 262 94,9 94,9 96,0 Sources identified as anonymous 5 1,8 1,8 97,8 Sources not identified 6 2,2 2,2 100,0 Total 276 100,0 100,0 News Reports Only Distinction Comment/Fact Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid <20% journalistic opinion 5 2,2 2,2 2,2 >20% journalistic opinion 3 1,3 1,3 3,6 no journalistic opinion 215 96,4 96,4 100,0 Total 223 100,0 100,0 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 23 15

Number of W/H Answers Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid 2 2,9,9,9 3 10 4,5 4,5 5,4 4 44 19,7 19,7 25,1 5 78 35,0 35,0 60,1 6 89 39,9 39,9 100,0 Total 223 100,0 100,0 Number of Sources Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid 1 47 21,1 21,1 21,1 2 43 19,3 19,3 40,4 3 51 22,9 22,9 63,2 4 31 13,9 13,9 77,1 5 17 7,6 7,6 84,8 6 10 4,5 4,5 89,2 7 11 4,9 4,9 94,2 8 6 2,7 2,7 96,9 9 2,9,9 97,8 10 2,9,9 98,7 11 3 1,3 1,3 100,0 Total 223 100,0 100,0 /Article/Viewpoints Frequency Valid Cumulative Valid >3 90 40,4 40,4 40,4 1 61 27,4 27,4 67,7 2 48 21,5 21,5 89,2 3 24 10,8 10,8 100,0 Total 223 100,0 100,0 24 16 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

Crosstabs News Reports Number W/H Answers /Article/Number_W_Answers Total 2 3 4 5 6 /Article/ Daily Nation Count 0 1 6 12 30 49 SourceName /Article/ Source Name,0% 2,0% 12,2% 24,5% 61,2% 100,0% Standard Count 0 0 0 4 56 60 /Article/ Source Name,0%,0%,0% 6,7% 93,% 100,0% Star Count 2 8 16 20 1 47 /Article /Source Name 4,3%17,0% 34,0% 42,6% 2,1% 100,0% The People Newspaper Count 0 1 22 42 2 67 /Article/ Source Name,0% 1,5% 32,8% 62,7% 3,0% 100,0% Total Count 2 10 44 78 89 223 /Article/ Source Name,9% 4,5% 19,7% 35,0% 39,9% 100,0% THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 25 17

/Article/SourceName * /Article/Viewpoints Crosstabulation /Article/Viewpoints Total >3 1 2 3 /Article/SourceName Daily Nation Count 32 2 11 4 49 /Article/ Source Name 65,3% 4,1% 22,4% 8,2% 100,0% Standard Count 5 23 24 8 60 /Article/ Source Name 8,3% 38,3% 40,0% 13,3% 100,0% Star Count 6 36 4 1 47 /Article/ Source Name 12,8% 76,6% 8,5% 2,1% 100,0% The People Newspaper Count 47 0 9 11 67 /Article/ Source Name 70,1%,0% 13,4% 16,4% 100,0% Total Count 90 61 48 24 223 /Article/ Source Name 40,4% 27,4% 21,5% 10,8% 100,0% 26 18 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

Crosstabs All Articles /Article/SourceName * /Article/Gender_Presence Crosstabulation /Article/Gender_Presence (n.a.) Both women and men equally Man Woman central central central Total /Article/Source Name Daily Nation Count 3 4 57 5 69 /Article/ Source Name 4,3% 5,8% 82,6% 7,2% 100,0% Standard Count 7 1 67 1 76 /Article/ Source Name 9,2% 1,3% 88,2% 1,3% 100,0% Star Count 0 0 54 2 56 /Article/ Source Name,0%,0% 96,4% 3,6% 100,0% The People Newspaper Count 1 2 70 2 75 /Article /Source Name 1,3% 2,7% 93,3% 2,7% 100,0% Total Count 11 7 248 10 276 /Article /Source Name 4,0% 2,5% 89,9% 3,6% 100,0% THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 27 19

/Article/SourceName * /Article/AuthorGender Crosstabulation /Article/AuthorGender Total (n.a.) both female male /Article/Source Name Daily Nation Count 15 5 2 47 69 /Article/ Source Name 21,7% 7,2% 2,9% 68,1% 100,0% Standard Count 13 0 3 60 76 /Article/ Source Name 17,1%,0% 3,9% 78,9% 100,0% Star Count 5 1 1 49 56 /Article /Source Name 8,9% 1,8% 1,8% 87,5% 100,0% The People Newspaper Count 15 0 13 47 75 /Article/ Source Name 20,0%,0% 17,3% 62,7% 100,0% Total Count 48 6 19 203 276 /Article/ Source Name 17,4% 2,2% 6,9% 73,6% 100,0% 28 20 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

Politician Coverage according to Newspapers cm2 cm2 cm2 cm2 Politician STD % STD DN % DN STAR %STAR PEOPLE %PEOPLE Kenyatta 5373 17,51 939 18,00 630 21,50 248 7,79 Musyoka 1173 3,82 53 1,02 139 4,74 81 2,54 Ruto 2916 9,50 677 12,98 281 9,59 506 15,90 Kenneth 230 0,75 15 0,29 66 2,25 0,00 Karua 1049 3,42 299 5,73 81 2,76 104 3,27 Wamalwa 1013 3,30 170 3,26 15 0,51 137 4,30 Mudavadi 2029 6,61 451 8,65 581 19,83 476 14,95 Odinga 8675 28,27 1649 31,61 721 24,61 1059 33,27 Kibaki 6302 20,54 844 16,18 340 11,60 158 4,96 Saitoti 313 1,02 10 0,19 76 2,59 257 8,07 Tuju 370 1,21 0,00 0,00 38 1,19 Muite 814 2,65 38 0,73 0,00 71 2,23 Abdikadir 428 1,39 71 1,36 0,00 48 1,51 Total 30685 5216 2930 3183 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 29 21

Party Coverage according to Newspapers cm2 cm2 cm2 cm2 Party STD % STD DN % DN STAR %STAR PEOPLE %PEOPLE G7 1241 18,13 48 5,93 195 14,40 58 8,91 KANU 822 12,01 81 10,01 165 12,19 43 6,61 KNC 20 0,29 0,00 0,00 0,00 NARC Kenya 124 1,81 143 17,68 142 10,49 99 15,21 New Ford Kenya 151 2,21 5 0,62 66 4,87 0,00 ODM 3772 55,10 431 53,28 700 51,70 294 45,16 PNU 437 6,38 101 12,48 81 5,98 104 15,98 Party of Action 10 0,15 0,00 0,00 38 5,84 Safina 54 0,79 0,00 0,00 0,00 UDF 0,00 0,00 5 0,37 0,00 UDM 60 0,88 0,00 0,00 0,00 URP 155 2,26 0,00 0,00 10 1,54 Wiper 0,00 5 0,77 Total 6846 809 1354 651 30 22 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS

THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS 31

P.O Box 43132 00100 Nairobi, Kenya T +254 20 2737058 / 2725032 M +254 0716 402554 E info@mediacouncil.or.ke W http://www.mediacouncil.or.ke 32 THE PRE-ELECTON COVERAGE BY KENYAN NEWSPAPERS