The former The National Alliance secretary general Onyango Oloo has revealed that many more politicians are on their way out of Jubilee.
This is after what he alleges is sidelining by Jubilee Party when TNA wound up in 2013.
Coming just a day after he ditched President Uhuru Kenyatta and his deputy William Ruto’s Jubilee Party, he said promises made by the two were yet to be fulfilled.
He complained that newcomers have become members which could be interpreted to mean that those who have been in the party are no longer appealing.
Saying several other politicians were willing to leave Jubilee to join ODM, Oloo added that those ditching the UhuRuto coalition were looking for a "home" which will mind their ideologies.
"We will approach Cord. We are coming home for the 42 tribes… and I say 'No! No! No! to corruption and ethnicity."
Among those who may decamp are nominated MP Johnson Sakaja who has expressed his disappointment albeit in a muted manner.
On Sunday, he was among politicians allied to Jubilee who disdained Peter Kenneth’s entry into the Nairobi governor race seemingly with the endorsement of senior members of the Jubilee coalition.
Others who may decamp include Miko Sonko, Margaret Wanjiru and others who have joined hands to run for seats in Nairobi County.
Cord leader Raila Odinga is hoping to have all the seats in Nairobi captured by the opposition.
Oloo, who spoke to the Star said, "Little did I know that the 11 parties that joined the merger were being led to vicious political conmanship."
He said that parties merged into Jubilee may never take part in any activities.
Oloo said, “JAP is in office. TNA is dead. UDF is dead... Other parties are dead. People like Kalembe Ndile are crying... The answer is that we were conned," he said.
He decried that those who worked on the ideology have been set aside saying that the party was founded on a sane agenda but it, unfortunately, turned out to be “not truly national".
Oloo was a key player in Uhuru's presidential campaign in 2013 but he is accused of pulling one-man shows during his tenure which rivals in Jubilee had pledged to prevent.