‘We need change, not just as young people but as a country’: Uganda’s youth on 40 years of Museveni

4 days ago 11

When Uganda’s electoral commission declared President Yoweri Museveni the winner of the 2026 general election this month, there was little surprise among the country’s younger voters. Those aged under 35 make up more than three-quarters (78%) of Uganda’s population – the second youngest population in the world – and for many, the news of Museveni’s victory confirmed what they had expected. For some, it also crushed the fragile hope inspired by the rise of the opposition leader, Robert Kyagulanyi, known as Bobi Wine.

Sarah Namubiru, 21, a university student hoping to be a teacher, says she did not vote for Museveni because of the low salaries in the teaching profession.

“The results were not a reflection of what we want and I am disappointed because it seems my vote was not respected. I am wondering where I will get a job with thousands of teachers superior than me being idle. I do not know anyone in the government and we all know you need to know someone to get a job. For me, that’s why I need change.”

In 2021, a report by the national planning authority highlighted that 87% of graduates in Uganda were unable to find employment, with most ending up doing odd jobs such as riding motorcycle taxis (boda bodas).

Bobi Wine, standing on top of a car, waves a Ugandan flag during a campaign rally in Mukono, 9 January 2026
Opposition leader Bobi Wine at a campaign rally on 9 January. Photograph: Luis Tato/AFP/Getty Images

Museveni, 81, has been president since 1986. He won his seventh term this month with 70% of the vote, amid claims of fraud and after a nationwide internet shutdown in the two days before the poll. In his victory speech he accused the opposition of being terrorists, while opposition leader Bobi Wine, who won 25% of the vote, went into hiding after a police raid on his home.

To his supporters, Museveni remains a guarantor of stability within the country and the region. To critics, his rule represents stagnation and a youth unemployment crisis. He has also been accused of overseeing brutal crackdowns against any dissent and widespread human rights abuses.

Dr Kizza Besigye, a prominent Ugandan opposition leader who was detained in November 2024 while visiting Kenya, remains in a Kampala jail on treason charges. His supporters say his health is failing.

The election result has forced many to reassess how or whether political change is possible.

“Well, the results were obvious; in my heart I knew they wouldn’t announce anyone else because Museveni has set up a system in his own favour,” says Norman Turyatemba, 32, a leader at Forum for Democratic Change (FDC), one of the opposition parties.

Like many, Turyatemba fears Uganda will continue to be ruled by the same family as Museveni is grooming his son, Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba, the commander of the army, to be his successor.

“The current leadership seems designed to suppress voices of young people,” says Turyatemba. “Imagine a system where leaders hold positions for over 40 years, is there any room for the next generation? With crippling taxes and soaring unemployment, the future looks uncertain for Uganda’s youth.”

Pedestrians pass electoral posters of Yoweri Museveni, Uganda’s president, in central Kampala, Uganda
Central Kampala in the lead up to the country’s general election. Uganda has the second youngest population in the world. Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images

John Katumba was the youngest presidential candidate in the 2021 election. He says: “Young people are likely to disengage from politics. You vote but your leader is never declared. It’s not the first time nor the second. That frustration has and will push many into silence.”

Katumba recalls the use of teargas and arrests during crackdowns on dissent in previous election cycles, saying the experience has left deep scars among the country’s politically active youth.

“We have learned how to survive disappointment. That idea that the ballot alone will save us has been beaten out of people but that doesn’t mean people have accepted the system,” he says.

Dr Shamim Nambassa, 26, a leader in Bobi Wine’s National Unity Platform, says Museveni’s victory does not reflect the views of the majority.

“[Museveni’s] declaration is a stolen victory; that’s why there was no celebration but rather silence over the nation,” she says. “I voted for a new Uganda to see medicine in hospitals, jobs for the many educated youth, the end of corruption and poverty among our people.

A Ugandan police officer pushes a supporter of opposition leader Bobi Wine, as police try to control crowds during a campaign rally in Mukono on 9 January 2026.
Police clash with Bobi Wine supporters during a campaign rally in Mukono on 9 January. Photograph: Luis Tato/AFP/Getty Images

“Nothing is going to come out of the next five years apart from misery,” she adds. “We do not expect anything good because even the peace he once gave us has been taken away.”

In the election preparations, Museveni’s party said it had 18 million supporters out of the 45 million Ugandans, more than 21 million of whom are registered voters. Grace Talindeka, 26, says she was one of them.

“I am a business person so I need predictability and Museveni gives that, much as it’s imperfect. Some of us don’t want chaos like we have seen in other countries like Kenya.

“If the opposition wants power, they need to show that they have solutions to Uganda’s problem rather than mobilising anger.”

Guma Twinamasiko, a youth leader in Museveni’s National Resistance Movement (NRM), says his party still has a vision for the nation and that many young people support the president.

“I know life is hard everywhere, not only in Uganda. I have seen roads all over improve, programmes for both the formal and informal sector. Young people should not gamble with leadership – if you have the best, why drop him?”

A man walks through a market at night in the Kalerwe area of Kampala, Uganda
A man walks through Kampala’s Kalerwe market after the announcement of the general election results. Photograph: Daniel Irungu/EPA

Many young people the Guardian spoke to shared the same concerns – finding work, affording rent and food, avoiding discrimination – but formal politics no longer feels like a means to fix those problems.

Ahmed Ssentongo, 25, an engineering graduate, is among those who ride a boda boda to make a living. As a supporter of Wine, he says he has been arrested three times for “wearing (red clothes) because they are the party colours of Bobi Wine”.

“We need change, not just as young people but as a country. Museveni did a lot of good things but he is now wiping them out. I want to get a good job because I graduated, I want to see a future for my child brighter than what I am going through now because everything is expensive.

“We need a total transformation but it can only come with a new government.”

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