Akufo-Addo’s commitment to campaign promise of making MMDCEs elective questionable - NDC
The opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) says President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo took a “misguided decision” in directing the withdrawal of the proposed amendment of Article 243(1) which was intended to allow for the election of Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives (MMDCEs).
It said it has taken note of the address to the nation last Sunday night by President Akufo-Addo, in which he announced the instruction to the Minister of Local Government and Rural Development to withdraw the Constitution Bills to amend Article 55(3) and thereby cancelling the December 17 Referendum as well as the withdrawal of the Bill to amend Article 243(1) which was to ensure the election of MMDCEs.
According to the NDC, President Akufo-Addo’s explanation that he based his decision on a lack of national consensus on the matter was questionable and therefore the NDC was deeply concerned about the development.
Advertisement
In a press statement issued on Monday [December 2, 2019] by the General Secretary of the NDC, Mr Johnson Asiedu Nketia, the NDC insisted that President Akufo-Addo's position was inaccurate to the extent that almost all stakeholders had expressed support for the election of MMDCEs.
“Both the NDC and the NPP had included this in their respective manifestoes. It is on the issue of the partisan politicisation of District Assembly and Unit Committee elections that the broad coalition emerged to oppose,” he indicated.
He, therefore concluded that the withdrawal of the Amendment Bill on Article 243(1) was completely unnecessary and brings into question President Akufo-Addo’s commitment to his campaign promise to make the position of MMDCEs elective.
“It is violation of a key manifesto promise of the NPP and exposes the fact that President Akufo-Addo’s much-touted pledge to make the position of MMDCEs elective has been a quid pro quo all along.”
“Above all, the withdrawal of the Constitution Bill to amend Article 243(1) amounts to denying Ghanaians their wish to have MMDCEs elected only because the President could not have his way to make district level elections partisan. This smacks of a betrayal of the trust of Ghanaians and further underscores the deceptiveness of President Akufo-Addo and the NPP,” the NDC stated.
Meanwhile the Minister of Information, Mr Kojo Oppong Nkrumah has explained that government decided to withdraw the two Bills because it felt the two could not exist without each other.
In a radio interview on Accra based Citi FM Monday morning (December 2, 2019), Mr Oppong Nkrumah said amending Article 243(1) without a YES vote to also amend Article 55(3) in the referendum would have barred political parties from fielding candidates for local level elections.
Advertisement
This meant MMDCEs could not contest elections on political parties sponsorship, a position President Akufo-Addo disagreed with.
There have been varied public reactions on radio and on social media since President Akufo-Addo announced a decision to call off the December 17 referendum with some arguing that the government should have allowed the amendment of Article 243(1) to go ahead in Parliament to make the position of Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives to be elective not on partisan lines but as independent candidates same as what pertains with Assembly and Unit Committee Members.
In effect, some have argued that the government should have withdrawn only the Bill for the amendment of Article 55(3) which prevents political parties to take part in local level elections following the breakdown of consensus.
But responding in the radio interview on Citi FM, Mr Oppong Nkrumah argued that "if you do that [amend Article 243(1)] and leave Article 55 (3) as it stands now, what you are by necessary implications saying is that we are making the positions of MMDCEs elected. Anybody can contest for it except political parties…That is an anomaly. If you are making the position elected, everybody must be allowed to run for it including political parties.”
Advertisement
The amendment of 243(1), by necessary implication, requires that we take away the bar on political parties so that while independent candidates can participate at the local level, everybody else can contest including political parties.”
Mr Oppong Nkrumah said the government was insistent on breaking the “exercise in hypocrisy” at the local level, which is already known to have unofficial partisan influences.
He added that the government was also concerned “about accountability and breaking the winner-takes-all jinx. These two are things that are being solved together at the same time with this exercise.”
Advertisement
- Related stories
- AG withdraws Bills that sought to allow partisan election of MMDCEs and Assembly Members from Parliament
- NPP saddened by the withdrawal of Dec 17 referendum
- Oppong Nkrumah justifies why govt decided to abort MMDCEs election too
- Why President Akufo-Addo called off December 17 referendum
Below is a copy of the full statement issued by the NDC on the matter
PRESS RELEASE BY THE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS ON THE WITHDRAWAL OF THE DECEMBER 17TH REFERENDUM AND AMENDMENT OF ARTICLE 243(1) OF THE 1992 CONSTITUTION.
2nd December, 2019
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has taken note of the address to the nation last Sunday night by President Akufo-Addo, in which he announced the cancelation of the December 17 Referendum and the withdrawal of the Bill to amend Article 243(1) to ensure the election of Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives.
The NDC views the cancelation of the December 17th Referendum as a refreshing victory for the party and the broad coalition of NO campaigners who rallied to oppose the intended partisan politicisation of Ghana’s local government system. Our collective patriotic decision to put Ghana first and preserve the sanctity of the non-partisan local government system of Ghana has paid off.
The withdrawal of the vexatious Constitution (Amendment) Bill means that district level elections and local government administration will be insulated from the vagaries of extreme partisanship which have characterised politics at the national level. It would afford an opportunity for Ghanaians at the local level to freely participate in the governance of their localities, independent of the influence of partisan machinations as intended by the framers of the 1992 Constitution.
We acknowledge the stance of various organisations such as the National House of Chiefs, Catholic Bishops Conference, Christian Council of Ghana, Chamber of Local Governance and the Centre for Ethical Governance and Administration, as well as academia and patriotic individuals, which compelled the President to withdraw the Constitution (Amendment) Bill which sought to introduce partisanship into Ghana’s local government system.
The NDC finds the reason given by the President as basis for his decision to call off the Referendum as contrived and self-serving. The justification of a lack of “broad national consensus” is a only convenient excuse calculated to save President Akufo-Addo from public ridicule relative to the abortive amendment of Article 55(3).
We wish to state without any equivocation that the real reason for the decision by President AkufoAddo to cancel the December 17th Referendum was nothing but his fear of imminent defeat for a YES Vote had the referendum come off. His fear of the embarrassment that defeat would have caused him and his government is what compelled and informed his decision and nothing more. The cancelation was therefore motivated by the selfish political interest of President Akufo-Addo and not the lack on any broad national consensus as he would want Ghanaians believe.
If we may ask, since when did President Akufo-Addo begin to believe in broad national consensus in the development of key national policies and programs? President Akufo-Addo has continuously demonstrated traits of autocracy in the making of critical decisions since his assumption of office as was witnessed in the matter of the Ghana card project, the appointment of new EC Chairpersons, the passage of an anti-vigilantism law, the very recent printing of new currency denominated notes, just to mention a few.
The only difference this time around, is that President Akufo-Addo could not prevail against the collective will of a determined people who would have no more of his divisive and autocratic rule. Therefore, Ghanaians will not be hoodwinked by the desperate attempts by some persons to make a listening President out of a consummate dictator who has simply run out of options.
We are also surprised by claims by President Akufo-Addo that a consensus had been reached at a meeting with the three former Presidents of Ghana in 2017, that district level elections should be made partisan. We wish to put on record that no such consensus was reached at the said meeting. Indeed President Mahama at the said meeting asked that the recommendations of the Fiadjoe Commission, as modified by the Government White Paper be respected. Those recommendations did not include the involvement of political parties in district level elections. We urge Ghanaians to treat this falsehood with the contempt it deserves.
Finally, We are deeply concerned that the President took the misguided decision to direct the withdrawal of the proposed amendment of Article 243(1) which was intended to allow for the election of MMDCEs. The President based this decision on a claim that there was no national consensus on the matter.
We wish to point out, that this position is inaccurate to the extent that almost all stakeholders had expressed support for the election of MMDCEs. Both the NDC and the NPP had included this in their respective manifestoes. It is on the issue of the partisan politicisation of District Assembly and Unit Committee elections that the broad coalition emerged to oppose.
Advertisement
The withdrawal of the Amendment Bill on Article 243(1) is completely unnecessary and brings into question the President’s commitment to his campaign promise to make the position of MMDCEs elective. It is violation of a key manifesto promise of the NPP and exposes the fact that President Akufo-Addo’s much-touted pledge to make the position of MMDCEs elective has been a quid pro quo all along.
Above all, the withdrawal of the Constitution Bill to amend Article 243(1) amounts to denying Ghanaians their wish to have MMDCEs elected only because the President could not have his way to make district level elections partisan. This smacks of a betrayal of the trust of Ghanaians and further underscores the deceptiveness of President Akufo-Addo and the NPP.
Signed. Johnson Asiedu Nketia
(General Secretary)
Writer's email: enoch.frimpong@graphic.com.gh