Gloria Orwoba Reveals How She Snatched Both Husbands

Bold Kenyan politician Gloria Orwoba openly shared how she snatched both husbands in a candid radio interview that stunned listeners. The former nominated senator described taking her first partner from a co-worker at work and meeting the second one at a lively club spot. She spoke without regret about her bold choices that shaped her personal journey before she dived into national politics in 2022.
The admission sent ripples through Kenyan social circles. Orwoba, born on May 25, 1986, in Kisii County, grew up under the firm hand of her single father after her parents split when she was just seven.
That early experience taught her resilience. She later studied architecture and social work at the University of Nairobi. Life took her to Europe in 2015, where she managed operations at Facebook data centres in Denmark while based in Sweden.
She built a career there. Yet personal matters pulled at her heart. Orwoba returned to Kenya focused on change. She launched the Uji Ya Glo nutrition programme that fed porridge and bread to hungry pupils in Bobasi Constituency.
Politics called louder in 2022. She ran for the Bobasi parliamentary seat under the United Democratic Alliance but lost the primaries. Party leaders still nominated her as senator to represent women in the upper house.
How did Gloria Orwoba meet her first husband?
She took him directly from her co-worker during her early working days. Orwoba shared the story with sharp honesty. She entered a stable relationship that led to marriage. The couple moved abroad together.
Challenges mounted over time. Cultural differences and family pressures strained their bond. Trust issues flared when distance grew. She recalled heated phone calls at odd hours. His relatives saw an opening and pushed harder. They separated in the Netherlands and South Africa. The split broke her heart deeply. She never fully recovered from it. He felt the same sting.
Life kept moving. Orwoba threw herself into new routines. She advanced her career and raised her firstborn child alone after the divorce. Friends noticed her strength. She refused to stay down.
Where did Gloria Orwoba find her second husband?
She got him from a club during a night out that changed everything. The former senator laughed as she recounted the moment. Music pulsed through the venue in those days. She spotted him across the crowded floor. Sparks flew fast. Their connection felt electric and immediate.
She pursued what she wanted without hesitation. The relationship blossomed into another marriage. Yet that union also faced tests. She left her second husband abroad when politics beckoned strongly back home.
In her words during the conversation, she explained the pull. She wanted to serve Kenya. He preferred to stay overseas. Arguments grew intense. She packed up with her child and returned solo. That decision marked a turning point.
Orwoba entered the Senate in 2022 full of fire. She pushed hard on issues like diaspora job opportunities. She exposed what she saw as trafficking cartels that preyed on desperate Kenyans.
Many victims ended up stranded or worse. Her efforts put her at odds with party insiders. On May 19, 2025, the United Democratic Alliance expelled her.
They cited disloyalty and misconduct after she backed Fred Matiang’i publicly for higher office. The Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission gazetted her replacement on August 15 that same year.
She fought the move. Orwoba showed up at the Parliament gates to deliver court papers. Security carried her away in a dramatic scene captured on cameras. Supporters cheered her defiance. Critics shook their heads. Through it all she stayed vocal.
People close to her describe a woman who grabs life with both hands. She raised four sisters alongside her father in Kisii. That household taught survival skills early. Later she balanced motherhood and ambition. Her nutrition programme touched thousands of schoolchildren in Bobasi before she scaled up.
Listeners reacted strongly to her husband’s stories. Some called her refreshingly honest. Others raised eyebrows at the blunt details. Orwoba stood firm. She said relationships evolve. People grow apart sometimes. No one should force what no longer fits.
Her journey mirrors many Kenyan women who juggle love careers and public service. She lived in Sweden for years and then chose Nairobi over stability abroad.
The Senate gave her a platform until politics shifted against her. Even now she speaks on job scams that lure youth with false promises. Hundreds lost savings chasing dreams in the Middle East and beyond.
Orwoba keeps moving forward in her own way. She maintains ties with past partners as friends where possible. The mother of at least one child focuses on her next chapter.
