The NPP’s junk
politics scares the electorate By
Dr. Michael J.K. Bokor Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Folks, we know that there is junk food, which
endangers human health if eaten. In politics, too, there
is much junk, which endangers national security. Much of
the politicking being done by the NPP camp qualifies as
nothing but junk politics for as long as it entails
intimidation, threats, bullying, physical harm to human
beings, street demonstrations, arm-twisting tactics, and
everything negative all rolled into one just in a vain
attempt to achieve the objective of placing Akufo-Addo
in power “at all costs”.
Even before the dust
settles on our concerns about the kind of rogue and
book---best qualified as JUNK---politics being done by
the NPP, more messages, threats, and useless venom
continue to be poured forth by those misleading the NPP.
We have on countless occasions drawn their attention
to the fact that Ghanaians are peace-loving people who
know how to exercise their franchise to elect leaders.
They've been doing so over the years, especially in this
4th republic when every opportunity exists for those who
qualify to join the queue to vote.
Electioneering
campaigns are held throughout the country and those
seeking the people's mandate speak on wide-ranging
issues to attempt wooing the voters. Those who choose
intimidation and use unproductive electioneering
campaign methods fail to win voter goodwill and lose the
polls. No matter what they do, their vituperations and
legal actions cannot turn the verdict of the voters.
What characterized Elections 1992, 2000, 2004, 2008,
and 2012 are glaring examples of how the electoral
process in Ghana could be challenged at different levels
but remain strong. I left out Election 1996 because the
NPP was roundly whipped beyond belief and no one did
anything untoward against the system, even if the losers
wailed, wept, and gnashed their teeth.
Elections
2000 and 2008 produced run-offs that were won without
any disturbance. Although the NDC protested against the
outcome of Election 2004, it didn't resort to unruly
behaviour to disturb national security. It condemned the
rashness of the late Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey in declaring
Kufuor the winner, usurping the legitimate
responsibility of the Chairman of the Electoral
Commission. Even then, it allowed the Kufuor government
to have its way.
At Election 2008, Akufo-Addo
failed to win the run-off and the NPP sought to use the
backdoor to subvert the people's will as its lawyers
(led by Atta Akyea) dashed to court on a Sunday to seek
an annulment of the results. But for the sane
intervention of the late B.J. da Rocha and Kufuor, much
would have happened to threaten life and limb in the
country because of the intransigence of Akufo-Addo and
his backers.
That intransigence would re-surface
at Election 2012 when Akufo-Addo refused to accept the
verdict of the electorate and sought to use the dark
chamber of the Supreme Court to put himself in power. We
still haven't forgotten the negative impact of that
petition hearing, which held the country to ransom for
slightly over 8 months. The repercussions are still
hanging around.
Thus, for the NPP camp to begin
beating the war drums again as we approach Election 2016
is more than reprehensible. Despite all the agitations
by its surrogates and its own leaders, the status quo
remains intact: no new voters register will be compiled;
neither will the existing one be validated. Indeed, the
EC is adamant that all the paraphernalia for the
elections are admissible and relevant to the polls. It
is gearing up to begin a limited voter registration
exercise and to clean the existing voters register for
Election 2016.
Even before anything serious
happens to challenge the EC's efforts, what do we hear
from the NPP camp? Wailing and flexing of muscles. Just
take, for instance, this latest threat from Fraudie Blay
(Acting NPP Chair):
"the party cannot guarantee
the outcome of a stolen verdict in the November general
elections." (See
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/We-can-t-guarantee-what-will-happen-if-verdict-is-stolen-NPP-432295).
He is calling for a "level playing field", saying
that inasmuch as they want to win the elections without
any blemish, they do not want to be cheated. That is not
all from him.
"I cannot guarantee what will
happen, the party cannot guarantee, we the executives,
we who are at the top, the Presidential candidate cannot
guarantee, if the ordinary people get angry, God forbid
if they decide that they won’t agree to what is
happening, and some people take the law into their own
hands, what can we do?… Don’t rule out things could
generate into something that we all don’t want..." he
said.
Folks, if this kind of junk politics isn't
anachronistic in contemporary times, then, I don't know
what else is. Talking about cheating makes Fraudie Blay
and the NPP really out-of-touch with reality. In the
first place, are the NPP people so DUMB as to sit down
to be cheated (By whom and at what point in the
electoral process, anyway)?
Does the cheating
occur at the polling stations, where voting is done in
the open after eligible voters have gone through the
verification process and moved on to exercise their
franchise once and no more?
Or does it occur in
the counting and collation of results in the full glare
of publicity? With the active involvement of the NPP's
polling agents and everybody/institution so mandated to
oversee operations?
Or are the results tampered
with on the way to the constituency, district, regional,
or national offices of the EC? How is that done when
records exist everywhere to discount any such tampering?
Or are the results falsified by the Chair of the EC and
his team? How inconceivable!!
Folks, the tone
being set by the NPP reveals nothing but abject
desperation and plain laziness---if not paralyzing
stupidity. It is a tone that scares voters instead of
wooing them.
At this time that the NPP needs to
send out messages to correct the negative impression
about it as a violent political camp, one hardly expects
the issuing of threats. In need of better means to sell
its candidate, issuing such threats will only do more
damage to Akufo-Addo, the Commander-in-Chief of the
NPP's wayward private security arm---"Invincible (or is
it "Invisible"?) Forces".
Ghanaians won't brush
aside his "All-die-be-die" clarion call and many other
happenings bordering on violence and lawlessness
(especially in the immediate aftermath of his losing
Election 2012 and the internal feud in the NPP, all of
which are being traced to him). The reality exists that
unless Akufo-Addo changes his dark spots, he will
continue to lose traction. Seeing him as a scarecrow
alone is enough to turn the scale against him.
Now that Fraudie is on the loose, threatening hellfire
and brimstone--- even though the Elections are 6 months
away---the obvious implication is that the NPP is too
paranoid to be tolerated. Such threats won't win it any
goodwill; instead, it will distance voters from its
cause. Then, at the polls, the impact will be felt.
By issuing such vain threats and failing to go down
to the people to seek their support, Fraudie Blay and
the NPP are really lost in the political wilderness.
They will not succeed in their manouevres and should be
ashamed for choosing the wrong tool with which to do
politics in this 21st century.
This kind of junk
politics has lost its value worldwide. Sticking to it
will only turn the NPP against itself; and the voters
will confirm everything at the polls. How much more do
these NPP people need to be told before they stop
chasing the mirage that they have constructed and set
their eyes on?
A good thing sells itself. If
Akufo-Addo is that good thing, he doesn't need to bully
anybody to attract customers so the highest bidder can
make him good at the polls. Branding President Mahama as
incompetent and splashing mud on him won't turn him into
a monster to be feared by the electorate. He is known
for what he is and will continue to be in his element to
attract voters.
Only those who are wearing masks
are afraid of being unmasked. He is not. That is why the
negative politics against him by the NPP isn't washing
with anybody. Isn't it long past the time for them to
sell their Akufo-Addo? It is the voters' market forces
that will determine everything for or against him.
Threatening to turn Ghana upside down if he is
rejected again is impolitic; it is unwise; and it is the
height of stupidity. I hope the NPP leaders are not that
much daft as not to see things properly. Self-righteous
as they are, they won't; neither will they listen to
reason to make amends.
As they continue to alarm
the voters, we will also continue to monitor the
situation and comment on it for Ghana's good. There is
no more room for their kind of junk politics.
I
have spoken!!
• E-mail: mjbokor@yahoo.com •
Join me on Facebook at: http://www.facebook.com/mjkbokor
to continue the conversation.
|