National
Why LC1 elections matter more than voters realize after years of delays

Namirembe Elizabeth, Kayunga District's returning officer
By Denis Mukisa
KAYUNGA, Uganda: As polling day for LC1 chairperson elections draws near, the Electoral Commission is stressing not just integrity but the critical role these grassroots leaders play in everyday life, especially after years of postponed polls.
Namirembe Elizabeth, Kayunga District’s returning officer, this week warned electoral staff against demanding or accepting bribes from aspirants, declaring zero tolerance for corruption. But beyond the anti-corruption message lies a deeper truth: LC1 chairpersons are often the first point of contact between citizens and governance.
“Aspirants will pick the forms, fill them and return them at no cost,” Namirembe said, announcing that nomination forms would be free starting Thursday, July 9, 2026. “These elections are among the most important because they directly affect daily life at the village level.”
LC1 chairpersons handle local dispute resolution, oversee community projects, and serve as a bridge to higher local government structures. In many villages, they are the ones who mobilize residents for health campaigns, mediate land disputes, and relay community needs to district leaders.
The significance of these elections is heightened by a long history of delays. The last full nationwide LC1 elections were held in July 2018, ending a 17-year gap since the previous one in 2001. After the 2018 polls, the five-year tenure of LC1 officials expired in 2023, but elections were deferred again, with the tenure officially extended to run until mid-2024. In the most recent cycle alone, official reports note that LC1 elections have been postponed at least four times due to budgetary and administrative constraints.
With polling finally set for Tuesday, July 28, 2026, at village polling stations across Kayunga and nationwide, interest in the positions is reportedly high. Some aspirants have already begun printing campaign posters ahead of the official nomination process.
Namirembe urged all prospective candidates and voters to complete registration before Friday’s deadline, warning that anyone who misses it will not be allowed to vote or contest. The district electoral team, trained last week, is compiling a new voters’ register, allowing residents who registered their national IDs in other villages to register locally if their village chairperson confirms residency.
In a country where local governance often determines service delivery and conflict resolution, and where voters have waited years for their say, the outcome of these elections could shape village life for years to come.
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