Tuesday,
February 5, 2014
Folks, Ghana is on course to
return to a two-party political stream. There is no hope for any third force
under the guise of the pro-Nkrumahist family. Sooner than later, pro-Nkrumahism
will be no more.
A viable political party that
wants to remain so does things to grow, not to disintegrate or give politics a
bad name. Or create fertile conditions for its members to be poached by rival
political parties. Unfortunately, the pro-Nkrumahist political parties aren’t
functioning this way.
I have a big issue with them
because they are more invested in tearing their own house apart than building
it to face the challenges imposed on partisan politics by our democracy.
Since the overthrow of the CPP
government in 1966 and strategic efforts made by the Nkrumah haters to erase
his name and accomplishments from Ghana’s history, the CPP has not had things
easy-going. Its victory at the June 1979 general elections to put the PNP in
office didn’t change anything because the Limann government fell victim to
military adventurism.
Then, when the ban on party
politics was lifted in 1992, the CPP couldn’t bounce back as a united front. It
did so in various configurations that have become history. Its main offshoot
the National Convention Party flirted with Rawlings’ NDC and entered into a
dangerous political marriage with the NPP called the Great Alliance that
flopped terribly).
When the brand name (“CPP”) was
unbanned, the Nkrumahist front re-emerged again in splinter groups, the main
branch bearing that CPP tag, hotly taunted by its half-brothers (the late Dan
Lartey’s Ghana Consolidated Popular Party and Dr. E.N. Mahama’s People’s
National Convention). Each seemed to be interested in only bearing a slice of
the “Convention” but not sharing anything concrete to return the pro-Nkrumahist
front to power and glory. Or even rising up by its own bootstraps. Only
irritating us with their occasional effusions about governance but doing
nothing to take over the rein of governance.
They have attempted merging but
not succeeded for reasons best known to their leaders. Sadly, the CPP has faded
really fast (with one accidental representation in the current Parliament by
virtue of a bye-election victory somewhere in Northern Ghana) while the PNC has
had some since the emergence of the 4th Republic, meaning that it is
worth recognizing as more viable than the CPP.
Dr. Paa Kwesi Nduom still
placards his Nkrumahist credentials but is little recognized as such, which is
why splitting ranks and forming the People’s Popular Party—and performing
abysmally at Election 2012—hasn’t raised him to any high pedestal. He is still
making some noises on the flanks but nothing exists to show that his party is
growing as a force to reckon with at future elections.
Truth be told, none of these
mushroom pro-Nkrumahist parties is worth recognizing as a political force to be
trusted to change the current political dynamics that have the NDC and NPP
swapping places to be in power—the NDC doing so more than the NPP has done in
this 4th Republic.
Now, here is the main issue.
While the NPP is doing all it can to put its plans to good use in readiness for
Election 2016, the pro-Nkrumahist parties are either crying over spilt milk or
in total disarray, unsure of their role in Ghanaian politics. Its national
chairman, Samia Nkrumah’s declaration of intent to contest Election 2012 as the
CPP’s Presidential Candidate is the biggest joke ever. On the basis of a dead
CPP?
The CPP is virtually in its death
throes while the PNC is currently being torn apart by allegations against its
2012 Presidential Candidate, Hassan Ayariga. And the allegations have exposed
the weaknesses of the party and created a nasty impression about it.
Credibility is gone!
It all began when the “Convention Forum” (a youth group in the
party) demanded that the party’s leadership should account for Ghc1.6 million
of campaign funds meant for the 2012 elections. The spokesperson for the group, Adam Akani, alleged that
the money was to be used to pay the PNC party agents who policed the
2012 elections but the agents have still not been paid.
Then,
David Apasara (the Treasurer of the PNC) specifically accused Mr. Hassan
Ayariga of hijacking and hoarding the party’s cars and money. According to him,
Mr. Ayariga received many cars, including Land Cruisers and pickups, as well as
different amounts of money as donation in the name of the party but hoarded all
of it to himself.
In
his reaction, Mr. Ayariga has dismissed the allegations
of embezzlement and said that he is not accountable to the party over monies spent
during the 2012 electioneering period.
In
an interview on Radio XYZ’s “Strict Proof” on Tuesday, he conceded receiving
some monies for his campaign just like his fellow presidential candidates but
added that all expenses for his 2012 campaign were borne by him without a cedi
from the party.
He
said that he was compelled to close down all his three restaurants because he
had to channel funds from those personal businesses into his electioneering campaigns.
He added that until he became the flagbearer of the PNC, the party was
virtually dead and so could not have attracted any sponsorship from anybody or
groups of people.
“The
Chairman is the leader of the party, so if there’s money missing, I think they
are the right people to explain to us where the money came from, who gave the
money, and how much it was, and where it went to”.
Speaking
to Joy News on Tuesday, Mr. Ayariga noted that if any money was directly
given to him at all, then, it probably means that the money was not meant for
the party.
MY
COMMENTS
Mr.
Ayariga has a big credibility problem to tackle; and no amount of huffing and
puffing will do so for him. No “Ayaricough” or antics similar to “Ayarigate”
will do so. It is serious business—to account for anything done or undone in
the name of the party that he led at Election 2012. Accountability is the call.
Clearly,
the pro-Nkrumahist family is virtually dead and will soon become history. The
occasional effusions or misplaced critical assessments of happenings in Ghana
coming from its agitated leaders won’t solve the internal problems tearing
everything into shreds for them. Neither will knee-jerk public demonstrations
of the kind that Dr. Nduom is organizing all over the place as if it is such
demonstrations that will enlarge his party’s following.
As
these parties waste time and resources splitting their own ranks, they give
credence to the claim that the NDC and NPP will remain the strongest political
parties to share political power in Ghana.
That
returns Ghana to a two-party stream (that had been the case before the collapse
of multi-partyism under Nkrumah’s agenda of the CPP’s being Ghana and Ghana’s
being the CPP with himself as the Life President).
Interestingly,
both the NDC and NPP have a collection of elements claiming to be Nkrumahists
but gravitating more toward the gravy train than clinging to the umbilical cord
that might nourish their ideological stream as Nkrumahists. They have become
politically bastardized and cannot persuade me that they are still Nkrumahists
who will do what Nkrumahists are expected to do to grow an Nkrumahist party.
With
the return of the two-party stream in Ghanaian politics comes many challenges
that the electorate should take note of and ensure that our democracy doesn’t
falter. I will be happy to see all these so-called pro-Nkrumahist parties
collapsed into the NDC (whose agenda for national development is not far
different from that of the Great Osagyefo).
It
will be a travesty of politics to have them troop to the NPP because both are
ideologically incompatible, even though the dethroned Ellembele Mugabe (Freddie
Blay) and Dr. Nduom have been in bed with this Danquah-Busia anathema over the
years. Freddie Blay has even picked up a nomination form to contest the
position of Vice Chairman of the NPP.
Such
turncoats are laughable, not because they come across as political prostitutes
but because they have no ideology to stand on and drift as the wind blows. They
are not to be trusted.
When
the two-party stream is consolidated, it will become necessary for laws to be
passed to regulate funding of political parties and the state itself charged
with supporting the two parties so a lasting regime for political organization
can be established for our democracy.
Then,
politics should be used to improve living conditions in the country, not to put
in power any group of self-seekers. The game of musical chairs won’t grow our
democracy!!
I shall return…
·
E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com
·
Join
me on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/mjkbokor to continue the conversation.
No comments:
Post a Comment