Tuesday,
August 14, 2012
I will raise a disturbing
question as the framework for my opinion piece: If it were the NPP’s Akufo-Addo
who had died, would the NPP leaders have swiftly and smoothly elevated his
running mate (Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia) as their party’s flagbearer for Election
2012?
I have
asked this question for a good reason, which I will explain soon in the light
of some happenings over the past three weeks that have led me to conclude that
Ghanaian politicians are a major cause for worry. By their unconscionable
posture, they are doing nothing but leading the country astray.
Such
negative traits as dishonesty, mischief, chicanery, and plain waywardness are
entrenched in their political lives and cannot be eradicated any sooner than expected.
They will continue to muddy the political waters and deepen the country’s woes
as they seek their own welfare at the expense of the country and its citizens.
I am pessimistic for a good reason or two.
While
those in the NDC are on people’s lips for alleged abuse of office,
incompetence, or plain irrelevance, their counterparts in the NPP are quickly
confirming their notoriety in many other ways.
Let’s
take a few instances to justify this stance and to reinforce our contempt
against these lying and thieving politicians for all that they stand for and do
with impunity in broad daylight.
Having
previously made scathing comments on ex-President Mills’ state of health and
casting insinuations that he was unfit to continue being in office, there was
every indication that the NPP camp would wish him out of the way to help them
regain political power. After all, he was their main target.
The
covert and overt political posturing that occasioned this impression might have
misled their supporters in parts of the Ashanti Region to “celebrate” when
rumours erupted that the ex-President had died on the very day that he was
departing Ghana for medical check-up in the United States.
Contrary
to expectation, the NPP leadership didn’t condemn that hideous act by their followers.
Then, as Fate would have it, the ex-President died on July 24 only to be
mourned by the very people who had wished him dead all along.
As if
that was not enough, one of them (Shakar Salar, a member of the NPP
communication team) impudently claimed that much of the grieving done for the
ex-President was fake and that, indeed, the thousands of mourners were being
insincere and had no genuine need to grieve. In other words, the mourning was
nothing but a display of hypocrisy. Shakar Salar said so when he spoke on Radio
XYZ’s current affairs program the Analyst on Saturday. This statement was
widely carried by the media. And he spoke in the name of the NPP!!
Can
anything be more nerve-wracking than this claim—a clear demonstration of
insensitivity and gross callousness? Yet, the NPP leadership hasn’t seen
anything wrong with this open claim nor have they dissociated the party from
that heinous utterance. None in the NPP has denounced the claim, meaning that
the spokesperson said what the party needed to be said for it.
I am left
in no doubt to infer from this paralyzing statement of insensitivity that
Shakar Salar might be telling us the truth as he saw it in the conduct of those
in the NPP he knew very well who mourned the ex-President. It is only such
characters whose shedding of crocodile tears I will not doubt; but the many
millions outside that political cabal who genuinely grieved at the loss of
their “Asomdwehene” did so as human beings touched deeply by the loss of a
fellow human being to Nature.
Another
instance, which gradually leads me to the import of the question with which I
began this piece. As if pursuing a systematic agenda of political chicanery,
the NPP turned to matters arising from the gap left behind by the
ex-President’s death to comment on the ascension of John D. Mahama as if all
was not well within the ranks of the NDC on that score.
Even
before the dust could settle on his elevation, the NPP had sought to make it
clear that the NDC was heading for disaster. But the reality proved them wrong.
Disoriented by the swift and smooth manner in which the NDC handled that
affair, what did the NPP do next?
They went
for the case of the Vice President and chided President Mahama for not
fulfilling the constitutional obligation to nominate his Vice. But they were
left slack-jawed in that area too, which returns me to my main question: If it
were the NPP’s Akufo-Addo who had died, would the NPP have unreservedly
(unanimously) uplifted his running mate (Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia) to become the
party’s flagbearer for the December elections?
Your
guess is as good as mine. I don’t in any way see that happening. There are many
obvious reasons why he won’t get the green light. You know them as much as I
do. No need to belabour anything here. That’s the real issue that the NPP
should be concerned with as it seeks solutions to its deep-seated credibility
problems. As an “Akanfuo” party, there is more for its leaders to work on than
being pre-occupied with others’ affairs. Poking their noses into their rivals’
affairs isn’t the solution.
Then
again, in the pursuit of their agenda, the NPP leadership organized a press
conference today at which Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey, NPP National Chairman, made
some utterances that clearly demonstrate the desperation that has thrown their
politicking into disarray.
In sum,
Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey stated that the Mahama/Amissah-Arthur “uninspiring
caretaker team” has nothing new to offer Ghanaians. He alluded to the NDC
pair as “spare tyres” that should be changed by Ghanaians during the upcoming
general elections (Myjoyonline, August 14, 2012).
My
immediate reaction to this claim was to dismiss it as the figment of a
frustrated mind that portrays the depth of disorientation into which the NPP
has fallen at the demise of the ex-President against whom they had sharpened
their political claws for Election 2012.
Now that
he is gone—reducing their political strategies to absurdity and leaving them
scrambling for new ones against limited time—they have nothing concrete to tell
Ghanaians but resort to this kind of cheap politics. Name-calling is their
tool, and that’s exactly what they have begun using.
Questions
for the NPP: Who is new in their camp to create any other impression than what
is already known about the NPP as a cabal of property-grabbing conservative
so-called “liberal democrats”? If those leading the NDC government are “spare
tyres,” what is there about Akufo-Addo and all the “old faces” parading as his
future government functionaries to assure Ghanaians that they are any better
quality material? Ghanaians already know them as jaded and bereft of innovative
governance skills—and they are not appealing at all.
It seems
the NPP can’t easily regain its composure to know that winning the December
elections will not be accomplished with the strategies that they have been
using all this while.
Ghanaians
want to know what concrete measures the NPP will implement to help it outdo the
incumbent. They may be complaining about living conditions but I don’t think
they will be misled by name-calling and outright vilification of the Mahama-led
government to rubber-stamp the NPP’s Akufo-Addo into office.
Crying
that the Ghana Broadcasting Corporation took instructions from the government
to black out their Akufo-Addo when he filed past the body of the ex-President
at the Banquet Hall last Thursday won’t help them either.
The
deeper-level issues are missing from the NPP’s agenda for reaching out to the
electorate; and that’s what must be addressed. The stunted publicity that they
recently gave their manifesto hasn’t done anything noteworthy. Will these
people ever learn how to do politics to win hearts?
Certainly,
winning over floating voters needs more efforts than what I have seen the NPP
do so far. We acknowledge the fact that we still have some four months more to
Election 2012; but if what I have so far seen about the NPP’s politicking is
all there is, then, there will be much wailing and gnashing of teeth for those
among them who have already assured themselves of setting foot on the Promised
Land.
E-mail: mjbokor@yahoo.com
Join me on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/mjkbokor
Dr Bokor,
ReplyDeleteI think you are intellectually dishonest. What insinuations are you talking about? Was the late president seriously sick or not? I think you have allowed your tribe to crowd your intelligence with all due respect Dr. after all the criminality that has occurred under NDC, you still have the audacity to accuse the NPP for property grabbing party? You look over corruptions in the name of judgment debts under NDC and accuse the opposition? where is your intellectual reasoning? It is people like you that is why Ghana is where it is.
kwaku poku. kgpoku@gmail.com
honourable poku, your opinion is well heard but the fact still remains that if the NPP does not backup its strategies for the december polls, there will surely be weeping and gnashing of teeth in that camp at the end of the day.
ReplyDeleteKadjita Asumbisa k.asumbisa@gmail.com