Mills will beat Nana Addo in
bitter 2012 polls - Economist
The UK-based Economist Intelligence Unit is
predicting a slim victory for the ruling
National Democratic Congress (NDC), if the
2012 general elections were held today.
According to the Unit's analysis for its
monthly review for December 2011, the 2012
election looks to be a repeat of the 2008
election, where President Mills defeated Nana
Akufo-Addo by less that 1% of the vote after
going to a second round.
“Overall, the Economist Intelligence Unit puts
Mr Mills and the NDC as the very slight
favourites for election victory, although an
NPP victory is entirely possible,” it noted.
The Unit also took into consideration the
recent Synovate poll where both the NDC and
the NPP have been quick to jump on the poll
results, with the former dismissing the
results as doubtful and the latter accepting
them as "encouraging".
The Synovate poll, conducted in September 2011
put Mr Akufo-Addo ahead, with 48% of those
surveyed intending to vote for him compared
with 41% for Mr Mills. This national figure
masked regional variations. For example, Mr
Akufo-Addo was behind Mr Mills in the Greater
Accra Region, with support of 37% to Mr Mills'
46%. Greater Accra is a key region in any
presidential poll, given the size of the
population.
The Economist Intelligence Unit noted that
similar polls carried out before the 2008
elections showed a similarly close race,
further lending credence to the notion that
2012 will be little different. The powers of
incumbency are not as significant in Ghana as
in most other countries in Africa, with an
established pattern of the ruling party being
evicted from power, it noted.
However, the report said, the NDC is likely to
be given the nod because Ghanaian electorate
do tend to give those in power two terms
before evicting them.
It described as a “relatively populist” the
2012 budget which comes at the back of the NDC
taking advantage of incumbency to control the
early oil windfall and high commodity prices.
“Nevertheless, there is also a downside to
being the incumbent, as popular expectations
of what oil and strong growth will bring tend
to verge on the unrealistic,” it pointed out.
The Economist Intelligence Unit also cited the
continuous criticism of the Mills-led
government by the former president, Jerry
Rawlings, for their inability to deliver on
the election promises of 2008; Mr Rawlings
said the Mills government is acting like it is
still in opposition.
“The actions of Mr Rawlings continue to call
into question how active he will be in the
NDC's re-election campaign for the 2012
election and whether or not he can
realistically endorse Mr Mills given the level
of criticism that he has levelled at the
president in recent years.”
According to the Unit, Mr Rawlings, who is the
founder of the NDC, influence on the party
does appear to be on the wane, highlighted by
the heavy defeat of his wife, Nana Konadu
Agyemang Rawlings, at the NDC party congress
in July, when she challenged Mr Mills for the
party's presidential candidacy in the 2012
election (August 2011, The political scene).
“Some NDC members have started to accuse Mr
Rawlings of getting closer to the NPP,
although this would seem an exaggeration given
Mr Rawlings' bitter history with the
opposition party and its former president,
John Kufuor. However, Mr Rawlings' attacks on
the president are proving to be valuable for
the NPP, as they can point to the attacks as
proof of Mr Mills' ineffectiveness, especially
as the attacks are coming from the NDC founder
himself.”
"In addition, the very public tensions within
the NDC (illustrated by Mr Rawlings' attacks
on Mr Mills), threaten to further undermine
the attractiveness of the party. For the
moment, the NPP's poor fiscal record while in
office and the large fiscal deficit inherited
by the NDC upon coming to power do not appear
to be featuring heavily in the minds of the
electorate. While the political fight remains
focused on the NDC's problems and possible
failings, the ruling party will continue to be
put on the defensive."
Nana Otu Acheampong, December 14, 2011
|