Nasra Yusuff: “I thought politics got boring after Raila Odinga left – but Sifuna is cooking!”

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Nasra Yusuff: “I thought politics got boring after Raila Odinga left – but Sifuna is cooking!”

Media and Content Creator Nasra Yusuff has poured her heart out about politics, grief, and finding her spark again admitting the political scene felt empty after the death of former Prime Minister Raila Odinga.

Posting on Instagram on Saturday, February 21, 2026, Nasra confessed that politics lost its flavour when the man many called Mzee passed on.

“I thought politics would get boring since Mzee left,” she wrote — a raw admission that captured the emotional vacuum many Kenyans quietly felt.

But now, something has shifted.

With renewed energy in the political arena, Nasra says the excitement is creeping back and she’s fully tuned in again.

“Bana Edwin Sifuna is cooking properly,” she joked, signaling that political drama and debate are once again worth watching.

Her final declaration was short, loud, and full of life:

“I am so back!”

Grief that hasn’t faded

Nasra’s renewed interest comes months after she openly mourned Raila’s death, admitting she still struggles to accept the loss.

“Rest in power, Jakom… Ni hawa wamemove on, mm bado niko in denial.”

The words revealed a grief that lingers — the feeling that while the country may be moving forward, some hearts are still catching up.

She repeated the line “mm bado niko in denial,” underscoring how deeply the loss continues to weigh on her.

A nation still feeling the impact

For many Kenyans, Raila Odinga’s passing was more than political — it was personal. Conversations about him still dominate public discourse, reflecting the emotional mark he left across generations.

Nasra’s journey mirrors that national mood: from shock and silence to slowly rediscovering engagement.

Nasra Yusuff says that she thought politics would get boring since Raila Odinga left, but Sifuna is cooking. Photo: Online
Nasra Yusuff says that she thought politics would get boring since Raila Odinga left, but Sifuna is cooking. Photo: Online

When she said politics felt boring after his death, it spoke to collective mourning.
When she now says “I am so back,” it signals something else — healing, renewed curiosity, and a political stage that feels alive again.

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