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Ruto signs the Finance Bill early as Gen Z marks the June 25 anniversary

Ruto signs the Finance Bill early as Gen Z marks the June 25 anniversary

A new finance law with bread VAT and phone-activation duty revives the 2024 grievance; for the first time Ruto signs before June 25, the date that has met him with protests every year

Leaders· escalating 生活如何改变·谁说了算 ·6 takes ·更新 2026年6月24日

Summary

Ahead of the 25 June anniversary of the 2024 Gen Z Protests, President William Ruto signed the Finance Bill 2026 into law — the first time he has signed before June 25, a date that has met his government with protests every year. The law changes ordinary bread from tax-exempt to standard-rated (16% VAT) and adds a 25% excise duty on phones at activation. Treasury CS John Mbadi disputed online claims of new mobile-money taxes. The leaderless, social-media-organised movement is back on the streets, with families of 2024 victims and rights groups notifying police of marches. Ruto struck a conciliatory tone — apologising for "missteps" and launching a Climate Worx youth-jobs scheme — while warning against violence.

The split

Daily Nation relays the government "debunking myths" to defuse protest; The Standard calls the bill "punitive, again", a revival of the rejected 2024 measures. The EastAfrican and The Africa Report tie renewed anger to youth unemployment and a movement whose demand has shifted from killing a tax bill to ending Ruto's presidency. The fault line: a Treasury insisting the levies are misread versus a generation that no longer trusts the framing.

By the numbers

  • 16% — VAT now applied to ordinary bread (moved from exempt to standard-rated).
  • 25% — excise duty on phones at activation under the new law.
  • ~68% — share of Kenya's unemployed who are youth; overall joblessness near 12%.
  • 2024 — year protesters stormed parliament, forcing the original bill's withdrawal.
  • 3 — consecutive years June 25 has been met with protest.

Why it matters

Kenya's finance bill is the recurring flashpoint between IMF-backed consolidation and a young, networked electorate. Whether William Ruto's early signing and conciliatory gestures contain the anniversary — or detonate it — signals the durability of leaderless protest as a check on African governments and the limits of taxing your way out of a fiscal squeeze.

What to watch

  • The scale of June 25 protests and the security response after 2024's deaths.
  • Whether courts entertain challenges to the bread VAT and phone-activation duty.
  • Climate Worx and other youth schemes — substance or messaging.