Posted on:
www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Friday, December
16, 2016
The massive defeat suffered by the National Democratic Congress
(NDC) in last week’s general elections has created confusion among top officers
of the outgoing governing party.
Gurus in the party are at one another’s throat over who actually
caused the party’s humiliating defeat in the December 7 polls, with one group
insisting that former President Jerry John Rawlings, who founded the NDC,
should take the blame, saying he did not campaign for President John Mahama’s
re-election bid.
JJ’s Influence
The Greater Accra Regional Organizer of the NDC, Anthony Nukpenu,
has insisted that no personality other than Mr. Rawlings contributed to the
party’s defeat, claiming that he (the ex-president) continuously tagged the
Mahama administration as corrupt and that gave the opposition the weapons to
fire more salvos.
“We as a party have a founder in the person of Jerry John Rawlings
and as party members, we felt he should be a protective cover for the party and
the government; but he chose to arm the opposition against us,” he said,
adding, “The NPP got to our heels by campaigning against us heavily on this
so-called corruption perception and anytime they made that claim they claimed
that the founder of the NDC is the one who said the president is the most
corrupt person and his appointees are very corrupt so they should be voted out.”
Corruption
Weapon
Mr Anthony Nukpenu underscored, “So if you have this message being
used against you by your political opponents and courtesy the founder of your
party, it goes a long way to affect your political fortunes. And that has been
one of the tools that caused us to have this humiliating defeat.”
He said President-elect Nana Akufo-Addo’s acknowledgement of
President Rawlings in his acceptance speech was an indication that the former
president ‘armed’ the opposition with a ‘weapon’ for the elections.
“One of the tools he gave them was corruption, and Nana Akufo-Addo
in his acceptance speech congratulated him. On what basis was he congratulating
him, thanking him so much for what he has done for him?” he queried.
Founder’s
Hesitation
Mr. Nukpenu also claimed the former president shut his doors to the
NDC but allowed the NPP to come in, saying, “We as a party made moves to have a
meeting with our founder, he did not agree; but he had the time and opportunity
to open his doors to Volta Regional NPP executives to have a meeting with them.
“What is he telling the world? So things have gone bad; we don’t
want to go there. I know the several moves that we made when we needed him and
he turned us down. He has brought us to opposition which has been his call, so
he should call us; we are ready to go to him.”
In JJ’s Defence
However, in a sharp rebuttal, the party’s National Organizer Kofi
Adams, who was the Campaign Coordinator of the NDC, dismissed the Regional
Organizer’s claims and said the party was yet to take stock and know what went
wrong.
Kofi Adams, who was once President Rawlings’ spokesperson said, “Nobody
has done any research to show why we lost, and until we have done so, the blame
game must cease, and our former president and founding father must be allowed
to have his peace while we work around a strategy to bring everything on board.
“We went into the elections with the hope and desire to win. We did
not win the elections. Leadership would have to take the responsibility for our
inability to win the elections. Let us blame nobody, especially our founder.
“Those of us in active leadership at the national, regional and at
all levels, should take responsibility for what has happened and let us focus
for the next agenda which is making sure that once we hold the government to
its promise and also make sure that no matter what, we get back to power to continue
the great job that the country deserves.”
Conspicuously
Absent
The absence of the former president on the NDC campaign trail was so
conspicuous that it has become talk of the town.
Apart from Cape Coast in the Central Region where the NDC launched its
national campaign in August, Mr Rawlings was never seen at any NDC campaign
event, including the manifesto launch in Sunyani, Brong-Ahafo Regional capital,
in September.
Mr Rawlings refused to endorse John Mahama when he attended the Cape
Coast campaign launch, but asked the party supporters to wait till after the
elections before he would go round the country ‘to rebuild the party.’
He refused to disclose whom he voted for on December 7 when asked,
saying that his vote was secret.
Old Man
At a point when everybody was asking about the whereabouts of the
former president in the NDC campaign, the party’s General Secretary, Johnson
Asiedu Nketia, said brazenly that the former president was too old to campaign
for the ruling party.
He had queried cheekily on Joy
FM that “If Jerry is your father will you pull him to campaign at this age?”
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