The high-profile event marks a key leadership transition within the civic-political organisation, as outgoing General Secretary David Kabanda hands over office to Fadil Twaha.
Speaker Oboth’s arrival drew heightened attention at the Naguru-based headquarters, where a large gathering of political leaders, Members of Parliament, ministers, and religious leaders assembled to witness the ceremony.
The Speaker is expected to oversee the administrative transition, witness the signing of handover instruments, and deliver a keynote address outlining the organisation’s future structural direction.
The ceremony underscores ongoing internal restructuring within PLU as it seeks to consolidate its leadership and expand its organisational footprint.
Constitutionally, the Speaker of Parliament ranks third in Uganda’s national leadership hierarchy, coming after the President and the Vice President in the formal order of precedence.
However, in an increasingly contested and fluid political landscape, the office holder has also been associated with PLU, a loose political mobilisation platform widely linked to the Chief of Defence Forces and First Son, General Muhoozi Kainerugaba.
The development highlights the growing overlap between formal state institutions and emerging political formations, raising questions about the evolving boundaries of institutional independence within Uganda’s democratic framework.