To the rational political eye, President Uhuru Kenyatta and his Jubilee Party have a mountain of a job to do to get re-elected in the August 8 polls. They have to shed the dubious tag of “the most corrupt government in Kenya’s history” that anti-corruption czar John Githongo gave to them. They also have to deal with the biting inflation, and change the perception that the government, at the top levels, is a Kikuyu-Kalenjin affair.