I don't recall any campaign to fix the electronic system whose obvious flaws were readily apparent in 2013, if not earlier.
If you recall the court case, the problems were (a) some sort of multiple registers, and (b) what was in the registers. So, I would have immediately gone to work on:
(1) Agreeing on a single register.
(2) Cleaning up that register.
(3) Putting in place mechanisms to ensure that the register would stay clean with new registrations.
As it is, on the basis of Omollo's evidence, the "hard work" by CORD does not even start until a year later, and even then it does not deal with any of the above:
4. CORD met the IEBC and filed specific demands. This was to rule out any possibility of arguing that CORD had not tried to meet the IEBC. No results
Here is CORD's list of demands:
http://www.nation.co.ke/news/politics/Cord-leaders-to-meet-IEBC-officials/1064-2780200-ywa8psz/index.html"register" appears only in the down-the-list complaint that IEBC registered more people in Jubilee areas, which could have happened simply because more Jubilee supporters showed up to be registered.
Omollo could well say that (1)-(3) required a new IEBC. I don't see why. At any rate, what is being noted here is that CORD did not even try.
When I say CORD has not learned any lessons from 2013, one that I have in mind is getting people to register. How many new people has CORD added to the register in the period 2013-2016? How does that number compare to the size of its support base? What is CORD doing differently now? (Raila standing in front of huge crowds and urging people to register is not enough and will not replace the long, hard slog that is required at the grassroots level.) I repeat: Unless there are dramatic changes, and soon, bucketfuls of tears will be shed at the end of the registration period. (Before that, expect wails over IDs, which are required for registration .... but have got how much attention?)
One more time: The endless howling about 2013 will not help CORD. It should absorb the lessons from that year and then move on, quickly, to focus on 2017.