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H.E. President Museveni’s Statement on NRM’s Ideological and Strategic Vision

In a recent address to the nation, President Yoweri K. Museveni, the leader of the NRM, discussed the party’s ongoing efforts to strengthen its organizational structure and reaffirm its ideological and strategic foundations.

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In a recent address to the nation, President Yoweri K. Museveni, the leader of the National Resistance Movement (NRM), discussed the party’s ongoing efforts to strengthen its organizational structure and reaffirm its ideological and strategic foundations. Speaking to fellow Ugandans and the “Bazzukulu” (grandchildren), the President highlighted the success of a nationwide exercise launched on May 6, 2025, to audit and update the NRM membership register. This initiative began with village conferences and culminated in two significant conferences held at Kololo, often referred to by Ugandans as “Namboole” due to its historical associations with past events held at the Namboole Stadium.

The membership audit, a massive undertaking, revealed the NRM’s enduring strength, with over 20 million registered members across the country, of whom 18.5 million are of voting age (18 years and older). In his home village of Rwakyitura, for instance, the President noted that the original register listed 350 members. However, after accounting for migrations, deaths, and other factors, the verified number stood at approximately 251. He emphasized that this exercise was a testament to the NRM’s commitment to grassroots engagement and organizational rigor.

President Museveni reiterated the NRM’s core ideology, which is anchored in four fundamental principles: patriotism (love for Uganda), Pan-Africanism (love for Africa), socio-economic transformation, and democracy. He explained that these principles prioritize the collective interests of Ugandans and Africans over divisive identities based on tribe or religion. “Why love Uganda, why love Africa, and why not only love your tribe or religious sect? Because you need them for your prosperity and strategic security, as well as for market and defense potential,” he stated. He added that the NRM’s politics is driven by interests rather than identity, welcoming anyone who subscribes to these values to join the movement.

A key issue raised during the National Executive Committee (NEC) conference was the debate over the status of old versus new NRM members, a topic brought up by Rt. Hon. Rebecca Kadaga. The President firmly rejected any notion of prioritizing longevity of membership, citing both practical and ideological reasons. He recalled addressing this issue years ago, noting that legal checks confirmed that no minimum time requirement exists for members to qualify for party positions. Even if such a guideline were to exist, he argued, it would be misguided.

To illustrate his point, President Museveni drew on the biblical parable of the laborers in the vineyard (Matthew 20:1-16), where workers hired at different times of the day received equal wages. He likened the NRM to the vineyard owner, emphasizing that all members, whether long-standing or new, should be treated equally. “In the Kingdom of God, there are no young or old,” he quoted, underscoring that political parties must avoid creating hierarchies based on tenure. He warned that discriminating against or resenting new members could alienate potential allies, citing the Democratic Party’s (DP) missteps in 1980 as a cautionary tale. The DP’s failure to fully embrace new supporters, including former members of Kabaka Yekka and other factions, contributed to its political setbacks.

President Museveni also shared his own political journey to highlight the importance of inclusivity. A former DP member from 1960 to 1970, he joined the Uganda Peoples Congress (UPC) in 1970, distributing UPC cards in a DP stronghold. Despite his activism—mobilizing communities to abandon nomadism, founding the University Students African Revolutionary Front (USARF), and leading a student delegation to Mozambique’s liberated zones in 1968—the UPC failed to fully harness his contributions. This missed opportunity, he argued, underscores the need for political parties to recognize and integrate new talent without prejudice.

Drawing another biblical analogy, the President referenced St. Paul, a former persecutor of Christians who became a leading apostle after his conversion. Similarly, new NRM members, regardless of their past affiliations, should be embraced as equals, as they could bring significant value to the party’s mission.

President Museveni urged NRM members to focus on solving the people’s problems through government programs like the Parish Development Model (PDM) and Emyooga, rather than engaging in internal rivalries. He warned that discriminating against newcomers could undermine the party’s strength and alienate supporters, potentially repeating the mistakes of past political movements. “In political parties, all members should be equal,” he emphasized, advocating for a unified approach to advance the NRM’s goals.

The President concluded by promising to address organizational issues, including the challenge of corruption, in a future address. For now, his message was clear: the NRM’s strength lies in its inclusivity, ideological clarity, and commitment to the prosperity and security of its members.

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Laroo-Pece Mayor HW Aber Gifter Confirms Security Meeting Held, Pledges Community-Wide Approach to Restore Safety in Gulu City

Just days after taking office, Laroo-Pece Division Mayor HW Aber Gifter has confirmed a high-level joint security meeting has taken place and concrete measures are now being implemented to restore safety in Gulu City. She will meet LC1 Chairpersons on Tuesday to strengthen grassroots coordination on security and the ongoing Ebola threat, while urging residents to cooperate with security forces.

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From the left; Laroo-Pece Mayor HW Aber Gifter at her Swear in ceremony

Just days after taking office and vowing to make security her top priority, Laroo-Pece Division Mayor HW Aber Gifter has confirmed that a high-level joint security meeting has already taken place, with concrete action plans now being implemented on the ground.

In an update issued this Saturday, the newly sworn-in mayor told residents that she had successfully convened a meeting with the relevant security organs, during which practical strategies were agreed upon to tackle the wave of criminal activity that has gripped Gulu City in recent weeks.

While the mayor declined to disclose the specific details of the measures being put in place, citing security and operational sensitivities, she was firm in her assurance to the public.

“Concrete measures are already being implemented, and all stakeholders remain committed to restoring peace and safety in our communities,” she stated.

Moving beyond the security apparatus, Mayor Aber Gifter is taking her campaign for safety to the community level. She announced that on Tuesday she will meet with all LC1 Chairpersons across the division; the frontline leaders closest to ordinary residents to strengthen coordination, address challenges facing local leaders, and ensure more effective service delivery at the grassroots.

The move signals an understanding that lasting security cannot rest on enforcement alone, but must be rooted in community trust and local leadership.

The Tuesday meeting will not be limited to security matters. Mayor Aber Gifter revealed that the ongoing Ebola disease threat will also feature prominently on the agenda, with leaders to be urged to reinforce adherence to Standard Operating Procedures and intensify community sensitisation in their respective areas.

We must all play our part in protecting our families and neighborhoods,” she said, underscoring that public health and public safety are equally pressing concerns for her administration.

In what may be among the most practical appeals in her statement, the mayor called on residents to actively cooperate with security personnel conducting operations, whether by day or by night. She urged residents who are approached by security forces to calmly identify themselves, explain their movements, and comply with lawful instructions.

“Security personnel are working to protect our communities, and law-abiding citizens have nothing to fear,” she said. “Such cooperation will help security agencies distinguish genuine residents from criminals and suspicious individuals.”

The appeal reflects the reality that effective policing in an urban environment like Gulu City depends heavily on the trust and participation of the very communities being protected.

Six days into her tenure, Mayor Aber Gifter appears to be moving at the pace she promised. The security meeting has been held. Grassroots consultations are scheduled. And a health threat is being woven into the broader conversation about community welfare, a sign that her administration is thinking holistically about the challenges facing Laroo-Pece residents.

Observers and residents alike will now be watching to see whether the action plans agreed upon in the security meeting translate into a visible and measurable reduction in crime in the days and weeks ahead.

“Together, we shall build a safer Laroo-Pece and a stronger Gulu City,” the mayor concluded; words that will be tested, and remembered, by the people she serves.

Statement issued by HW Aber Gifter, Mayor, Laroo-Pece Division, Gulu City. Saturday, 30 May 2026.

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How Ministerial Changes Shape MDAs and Their People in Uganda.

Uganda’s latest cabinet reshuffle is reshaping more than political leadership it is transforming the daily reality inside Ministries, Departments, and Agencies (MDAs). As new ministers introduce fresh priorities and leadership styles, civil servants, especially communications and marketing teams, face uncertainty, shifting policies, and mounting pressure to keep institutions stable during political transition.

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Uganda is once again in the midst of a significant political transition. President Yoweri Museveni has executed a sweeping cabinet reshuffle, introducing major portfolio swaps, elevating fresh faces to key ministries, and retiring several long-serving ministers to advisory roles. As the dust settles on the new appointments, a quieter but equally significant question emerges; what does all this mean for the thousands of civil servants working within the Ministries, Departments, and Agencies, commonly known as MDAs, that these ministers now lead?

The formation of a new cabinet is both a constitutional practice and a political reset. It provides the President with an opportunity to retain, rotate, or replace ministers based on performance records and the broader strategic direction of government. But beyond the political theatre, each transition sets off a chain of consequences that reaches deep into the corridors of every affected institution.

The most immediate effect of a new minister arriving at an MDA is a realignment of policy priorities. Incoming ministers carry with them fresh mandates, political commitments, and personal priorities that may diverge significantly from those of their predecessors. Programmes that were once flagship initiatives can find themselves quietly sidelined, while new ones are championed in their place. Budget allocations shift to reflect the new leadership’s agenda, and strategic plans may be reviewed, restructured, or even discarded before they have had a chance to fully take root.

This is not unique to Uganda, but the challenge here is compounded by a documented weakness in coordination. Research on policy implementation in Uganda has consistently found that lack of coordination both within and between MDAs is one of the most significant obstacles to effective governance. A ministerial transition inevitably disrupts the delicate threads of institutional coordination that have been carefully woven over time, and rebuilding them takes months and sometimes years.

While the Permanent Secretary and core technical staff enjoy protections as civil servants and cannot be arbitrarily removed, the arrival of a new minister still generates considerable anxiety across the workforce. New ministers typically arrive with personal political teams be it advisors, press secretaries, and confidants, who begin to reshape the internal culture and power dynamics of the institution. Technical officers who built their careers under a previous minister’s priorities may suddenly find their skills and programmes deprioritised, their promotions stalled, and their institutional influence diminished.

This is further complicated by Uganda’s ongoing public service reforms. Under the Rationalization of Government Agencies and Public Expenditure, known as RAPEX, the government has been pursuing aggressive structural streamlining across MDAs. This includes the elimination of director-level positions, the abolition of roles such as Commissioner of Policy and Commissioner of Planning, and the consolidation of finance, human resources, planning, and procurement functions under single administrative departments. A new minister may choose to accelerate these reforms, pause them, or take them in an entirely different direction leaving staff in a state of prolonged uncertainty about their roles and futures.

Historically, Uganda’s public service has struggled with inefficiencies including inaccurate personnel data, ghost workers, delays in recruitment and promotions, poor workforce planning, and limited transparency. These systemic weaknesses tend to be exacerbated during leadership transitions, when decision-making slows down and institutional attention turns inward. Staff morale dips, planned training programmes are disrupted or defunded, and the organisation temporarily loses its sense of forward momentum.

If there is one group of employees within any MDA that feels the effects of a ministerial change most acutely and immediately, it is the marketing and communications team. Whether they carry the title of Public Relations Officer, Communications Officer, or Marketing Specialist particularly in agencies, these professionals sit at the precise intersection of political will and public engagement.
The moment a new minister takes office, the institutional narrative must change. Ongoing campaigns, carefully developed messaging frameworks, and approved communication strategies may be suspended overnight as the new minister seeks to define their own public identity and the MDA’s direction on their own terms. Marketing staff are then tasked with rapidly redesigning materials, updating digital platforms, and pivoting the organisation’s public voice often under intense time pressure and without adequate briefing.

Events and public engagements are equally disrupted. Communications teams manage the minister’s launches, press conferences, and stakeholder engagements. A change in leadership means rebuilding the minister’s public profile from scratch: new official photographs, revised biographies, updated social media presence, and entirely new speech templates. This is time-consuming, demanding work that falls squarely on marketing staff who may have little notice and even less guidance.
The reputational stakes are also high. Marketing and communications professionals serve as the public face of the institution, managing its relationships with media houses, development partners, civil society, and the general public. Confusion or inconsistency in public messaging during a transition can damage an MDA’s credibility, erode stakeholder trust, and undermine the very policy goals the new minister is trying to advance.

There is also the matter of budget. New ministers, eager to signal visible impact early in their tenure, often make ad hoc demands on marketing budgets, commissioning new publications, ordering roadshows, or directing media buys without adequate planning cycles or procurement processes. This places communications teams under extraordinary operational pressure, forcing them to deliver at pace while simultaneously navigating new and unfamiliar leadership expectations.
Perhaps most damaging in the long run is the erosion of institutional memory. When a minister arrives with their own communications advisors who bypass or sideline the existing marketing team, the organisation loses not just morale but the accumulated expertise of professionals who understood the institution’s history, its stakeholders, and its communication landscape. That knowledge, once lost, is extraordinarily difficult to rebuild.

It is worth acknowledging that Uganda’s public service framework does provide some structural continuity through transitions. The Ministry of Public Service is mandated to develop and administer HR policies, management systems, and structures designed to sustain a motivated and capable workforce across all MDAs, regardless of political change. Technical guidance, capacity building, and HR policy support continue to flow to MDAs from the centre, providing a baseline of institutional stability even when ministerial leadership is in flux.
The Permanent Secretary remains the administrative anchor of the MDA, responsible for continuity of operations and day-to-day management. And civil service protections, however imperfectly enforced, do offer a degree of security to career public servants who might otherwise be swept out with every political tide.

Ministerial reshuffles are a natural and necessary part of democratic governance. They renew political mandates, inject fresh energy into institutions, and hold leaders accountable through the discipline of rotation. But they carry real costs for the people who work within affected MDAs, and those costs are not evenly distributed. Marketing and communications employees, by virtue of their proximity to political leadership and their role as the public face of the institution, bear a disproportionate share of the disruption. Understanding this is not merely an academic exercise, it is essential for any government serious about maintaining institutional effectiveness, public trust, and staff wellbeing through the inevitable turbulence of political transition.

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President Museveni Proposes New Cabinet for 2026–2031 Term

In an unexpected move, President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni released the proposed 2026–2031 Cabinet on the eve of Eid, earlier than political observers anticipated. The list, first read on UBC’s 8PM bulletin, retains key loyalists including Janet Museveni in Education and Henry Musasizi in Finance, while maintaining continuity in top leadership with Vice President Jessica Alupo and Prime Minister Robinah Nabbanja.

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President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni has unveiled the proposed Cabinet lineup for the 2026–2031 period, exercising powers vested in him under Articles 108, 111, 113, and 114 of the Constitution.

The shocking list came out surprisingly on the eve of Eid, earlier than many expected. Analysts and political observers had anticipated the announcement in about two weeks or after the national budget reading. Instead, it was released ahead of schedule. The list was first read name by name on UBC during the 8PM news bulletin before being shared officially on social media.

The list, released via the President’s official X account, retains several key figures while introducing some new faces into major portfolios. Vice President Jessica Rose Epel Alupo and Prime Minister Robinah Nabbanja have been reappointed to their positions.

Top Leadership Positions

  • Vice President: Hon. Jessica Rose Epel Alupo (Maj. Rtd.)
  • Prime Minister and Leader of Government Business in Parliament: Hon. Robinah Nabbanja

Deputy Prime Ministers:

  1. Rt. Hon. Rebecca Kadaga – 1st Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for East African Community Affairs
  2. Hon. Dr. Crispus Walter Kiyonga – 2nd Deputy Prime Minister and Deputy Leader of Government Business in Parliament
  3. Hon. Lukia Nakadama – 3rd Deputy Prime Minister and Minister without Portfolio

Key Cabinet Ministers

  • Education and Sports: Hon. Janet Kataaha Museveni
  • Finance, Planning and Economic Development: Hon. Henry Musasizi
  • Justice and Constitutional Affairs: Hon. Norbert Mao
  • Defence and Veterans Affairs: Hon. Kiryowa Kiwanuka
  • Health: Hon. Dr. Chris Baryomunsi
  • Foreign Affairs: Amb. Adonia Ayebare
  • Internal Affairs: Hon. Prof. Ephraim Kamuntu
  • Agriculture, Animal Industry and Fisheries: Hon. Frank Tumwebaze
  • Energy and Mineral Development: Hon. Dr. Monica Musenero Musanza
  • Works and Transport: Hon. Byamukama Fred
  • Lands, Housing and Urban Development: Hon. Judith Nabakooba
  • Trade, Industry and Cooperatives: Hon. Sanjay Tanna
  • Gender, Labour and Social Development: Hon. Lt. Gen. Henry Tumukunde Kakurugu

Other notable appointments include:

  • Hon. Jim Muhwezi – Minister, Office of the President (Security)
  • Hon. Babirye Milly Babalanda – Minister, Office of the President (Presidency)
  • Hon. Minsa Kabanda – Minister for Kampala Capital City and Metropolitan Affairs
  • Gen. Katumba Wamala – Minister of Public Service
  • Maj. Gen. Kahinda Otafiire – Minister of Water and Environment

Ministers of State

The list features multiple Ministers of State across key sectors to support the Cabinet Ministers in their respective dockets.

Senior Presidential Advisors

Several senior figures have been appointed as Senior Presidential Advisors, with specific portfolios to be communicated later. These include:

  • Hon. Hamson Obua
  • Hon. Ruth Nankabirwa
  • Hon. Francis Mwebesa
  • Hon. Evelyn Anite

Additionally, Hon. Dr. Kenneth Omona has been reassigned to the Diplomatic Service as an Ambassador.

The proposed Cabinet maintains significant continuity while reflecting regional and technical balancing. The appointments are subject to parliamentary approval as required by the Constitution.

This new Cabinet will be tasked with steering Uganda’s development agenda through the next five years, focusing on economic growth, service delivery, and regional integration.

Article compiled from the official announcement by President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni.

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