Andrew Kibe reveals why he struggles to like Ruto
By Steve Ireri, January 8, 2026Media personality Andrew Kibe has stated that he struggles to like William Ruto, explaining that his difficulty with the Head of State is driven by uncertainty about how genuine and authentic a leader the President truly is.
Speaking during an interview with Alex Mwakideu on Thursday, January 8, 2026, Kibe explained that his views on leadership are closely tied to his wider hatred for fakeness, noting that the same discomfort he feels towards unclear leadership is the same discomfort he associates with marriages.
“I hate marriages because of the fakeness that exists in those spaces, and I really hate fake behaviour and people who fake things, which is why I struggle with our President, because I do not know how fake he is, and I struggle with him because I cannot tell how genuine he truly is,” Kibe said.
Kibe explained that he liked former President Daniel Arap Moi because he had openly stated that he did not have a wife, meaning that even if he were seen with a woman, it would not have raised concern or appeared deceptive to the public.
He stated that he hates marriages because of the fakeness that exists in those spaces, adding that he strongly dislikes fake behaviour and people who survive on pretence.
“I liked Moi because he deliberately said that he did not have a wife, which meant that even if he were found with a woman, it would not have been an issue, and my point always comes back to the fact that married people are fake, because I do not know a married person who is not fake,” Kibe said.

The former radio presenter, who claimed that he does not know a single married person who is not fake, revealed that women and married people are the two groups of people he is currently trying to step away from working with.
He lamented that one can agree on something with a woman at one moment and encounter a completely different position the following day, stating that such changes make trust difficult.
“That is why at the moment the two types of people I am trying to step away from working with are married people and women, because for me the reasons are the same, since you can agree on something with a woman today and tomorrow she has already changed her mind,” he said.
Citing Kikuyu tradition, the media personality stated that matters involving women are usually resolved in the morning because what is said at night and what is said in the morning are often two different things.
“Changing minds is not for men, because when a person like me commits to something, it happens, but women and married men cannot be trusted, and in our Kikuyu tradition we say that matters involving women are usually settled in the morning because what she tells you at night and what she tells you in the morning are two completely different things, and I have learnt how they are and I choose to stay away from both,” Kibe shared.