Dude's trying to win a Ugandan election by actually knocking on doors. Godfrey Acer Okot, who wants to be the MP for Nakawa East, is ditching big rallies for a grindier tactic, hitting up voters at their homes and jobs around the constituency. He says listening beats shouting empty promises any day.
His whole thing is built on practical fixes. People keep telling him the main issues are no jobs for young people, small businesses going under, crappy roads, bad drains that flood, spotty power, dirty water, and horrible housing. His pitch is about doing stuff, not just talking. For jobs, he wants to set up real skills training that actually matches what employers need, working with trade schools and companies. He says he will push hard for more SACCOs, which are local savings and loan groups, to get funding to small biz owners so they do not fold.
Fixing the physical stuff is a huge part of his plan. He is talking about getting the roads and drains sorted, making sure electricity and clean water are reliable for everyone. He connects those basic things directly to whether the local economy can get better and people can stay healthy. On the awful housing in packed neighborhoods, he mentioned pushing for new policies and deals to make affordable places to live. Okot flat-out said the area's problem is not a shortage of political promises, but terrible follow-through and weak execution. He promised to force better teamwork between the elected officials and the government workers who are supposed to get projects done, aiming for actual results.
This constant door-knocking and focus on specific answers is getting him seen as a candidate who might follow through, one focused on inclusion and getting blamed if nothing happens.
His whole thing is built on practical fixes. People keep telling him the main issues are no jobs for young people, small businesses going under, crappy roads, bad drains that flood, spotty power, dirty water, and horrible housing. His pitch is about doing stuff, not just talking. For jobs, he wants to set up real skills training that actually matches what employers need, working with trade schools and companies. He says he will push hard for more SACCOs, which are local savings and loan groups, to get funding to small biz owners so they do not fold.
Fixing the physical stuff is a huge part of his plan. He is talking about getting the roads and drains sorted, making sure electricity and clean water are reliable for everyone. He connects those basic things directly to whether the local economy can get better and people can stay healthy. On the awful housing in packed neighborhoods, he mentioned pushing for new policies and deals to make affordable places to live. Okot flat-out said the area's problem is not a shortage of political promises, but terrible follow-through and weak execution. He promised to force better teamwork between the elected officials and the government workers who are supposed to get projects done, aiming for actual results.
This constant door-knocking and focus on specific answers is getting him seen as a candidate who might follow through, one focused on inclusion and getting blamed if nothing happens.