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John
Atta-Mills and the spirit of democracy
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong
Politically, for long Ghanaians have been in some kind
of indistinct bereavement for genuine democratic
practices they sense they have lost somewhere – what was
authentically Ghanaian traditional value where consensus
and participation drive politics, a sacred Ghanaian
stuff.
For almost 27 years out of their 51 years existence,
Ghanaians squandered it, throwing it away in the messy
interregnum of 21 years military juntas and 6 years of
one-party systems. A whisper over the years said “Ghana
had been founded on democracy and freedoms but muddled.”
For the interim these qualities were hidden, impounded
in some internal exile, regenerating. Now John Evans
Atta-Mills rides into the Golden Jubilee House branding
democracy and freedoms in a kind of matured triumph.
But are they real stuff? The authentic Ghanaian
traditional possessions revived and restored to the
Golden Jubilee House? Do they still have transforming
powers? I will answer them later. For now everyone knows
that Atta-Mills’ democratic struggles are real, having
attempted to be president three times.
Ghanaians watched him.
Atta-Mills looked at very bad odds and gambled; running
against the formidable Nana Akufo-Addo seemed, at some
point, a mere technicality.
As Dele Momodu, the veteran Nigerian
journalist-businessman based in Accra, wrote of
Atta-Mills in the Lagos, Niger-based This Day, “But
history is full of twists and turns. The Prof had been
written off by many pundits. They said he was finished
in politics. That age was no longer on his side. And
that his health was failing. Some even alleged that he
was being ravaged by cancer, and predicted only gloom
and doom for him. But the man only had problems with his
eyes, suspected to be a bout with glaucoma or cataract
at the most. He went into his primaries to duel with
much younger personalities, and richer favourites. He
was also said to have lost the favour of his political
godfather, Jerry Rawlings. Against all odds, he won the
primaries in a landslide victory. And many queried the
rationale behind picking a candidate who had brought
failure twice already to their party, when there were
younger and funkier aspirants like John Mahama, Eddie
Annan and Ekow Spio Garbrah.”
After much grueling campaigns, Ghanaians made an
interesting choice – one that a year ago lay at the
outer margins of the feasible. They responded to
Atta-Mills by voting him in a very tight race against
Akufo-Addo. Ghanaians deserted the strong national view
that Atta-Mills would be disturbed by the restless and
autocratic former President Jerry Rawlings, founder of
his National Democratic Congress. In a Ghana which
democracy isn’t consolidated and that purport to be a
flash-point of African democratic enlargement, Ghanaians
gave their future to Atta-Mills under the purported
shadow of Rawlings. They rejected an Akufo-Addo shaped
by the moral universe of democratic struggles for the
past 30 years in favour of the Atta-Mills who has
dabbled in a pseudo-military regime and not known
nationally as a democratic and freedoms struggler.
The long-running drama of election 2008 was a leap of
faith in a bitter and unpredictable election year that
saw the far remote rural Tain deciding who the President
of Ghana becomes. The tightness of the race and the
similarity of the parties’ manifestoes might explain the
closeness of the votes and the immense light put on
politicians that saw some heavy weights loosing.
The departing Osu Castle of John Kufour, impresario of
democratic and freedoms enlargement, couldn’t help
Akufo-Addo, in some inexplicable ways, become president.
This made the NPP spineless, confused, whining,
rudderless – rushing to a Fast Track Court to stop the
Tain post-run-off election and later redrawing their
case from the court. And shunning the Tain elections,
purportedly for security reasons.
In the face of rising crimes, poor sanitation, global
economic meltdown, energy crisis, and soaring food
prices, discontent with politics was down on a deeper
anxiety. Atta-Mills moved to assuage Ghanaians. Ghana’s
moral, economic and political pre-eminence in Africa
seemed to dim. The battleground ceased to be raw
Soviet-type Socialism but democracy and freedoms as
vehicles for progress.
Atta-Mills successful campaigns for the presidency makes
him the epicentre of Ghana’s flowering democracy. The
election has made Atta-Mills a key democracy and
freedoms driver. Atta-Mills campaigns, conducted with
dignity, with earnest attention to issues and with
impressive display of calmness under fire, served to
flower the legitimacy of Ghanaian politics and thus,
potentially, of the budding democracy itself. Atta-Mills
victory places him in a position to thicken democracy
and freedoms.
Atta-Mills, carrying the unique value of his generation
to lay the ground work for democracy, represents the
principle of broadened democracy and inclusion – women,
the disabled, the marginalized, and the youth. This will
have African meaning as well. Atta-Mills stated the
winner’s vision when he said, “My dream is that Ghana in
this century will be the nation that leads Africa. An
educated, thriving, and prosperous democracy, that we
can hold up as an example to the world of what Africa
can be, when its people move and work together.”
Atta-Mills’ year was a mixture of luck, timing and
temperament. In the first presidential elections on
December 7 he lost narrowly to Akufo-Addo. In the second
one, on December 28, he won narrowly against Akufo-Addo.
In a hang parliament, where the NDC has 114 against the
NPP’s 107, Atta-Mills has to be a magician, joggling
both the NDC and NPP legislators (and the other 7
independent ones) to drive his policies through. The
role of luck in 2008 is conspicuous – as the political
system became unpredictable with remote rural Tain
swinging itself and becoming the chief determiner.
Atta-Mills came to the finish line after hustling
through very narrow gates. Atta-Mills won 50.23% of the
popular votes against Akufo-Addo’s 49.77%. From around 9
million legal ballots cast Atta-Mills beat Akufo-Addo by
just 40,000 votes.
For Atta-Mills, the course of his campaign was strewn
with crucial antecedents - his ability to ward-off his
alleged sickness, his university peers not voting for
him as the Vice Chancellor of the University Ghana
(where he was a law teacher), Rawlings shadow hovering
over him that made him appear not-his-own-man, and the
picture that he flashes images of Kofi Busia and Hilla
Liman, both seen as politically dull and easily
manipulable Prime Minister and President respectively.
It was Atta-Mills luck that most of these notions
surfaced early in the campaign, allowing time for him to
prove his equilibrium and allowing Ghanaians to get
bored by them and move on. If these accusations had
intensified in the homestretch of the campaign,
Atta-Mills would probably have been defeated.
Atta-Mills’ best luck was that despite Kufour’s economy
having impressive record with GDP of $16 billion, from
$4 billion under his NDC in 2000, most Ghanaians were
still being dragged along the bottom for the duration of
the campaign. Akufo-Addo, as the face of NPP, had hoped
that Ghanaians would stick with Kufour’s economics and
policies they knew rather than risk the economic damage
that Atta-Mills might do. The other six presidential
candidates didn’t do any harm to Atta-Mills.
There weren’t enough voters disgusted with the Kufour
performance that they were willing to take a chance that
Atta-Mills might tax and spend the economy into yet more
troubles. From their manifestoes, there were slight
difference between Atta-Mills and Akufo-Addo. If there
were vast difference between the NPP and NDC programs
and Kufour communicate his economic performances better
to the public, Akufo-Addo might have been turn out as
the next president.
Drawn from political tradition that was born out of
military juntas and that transformed itself into social
democracy, history may eventually decide that the key to
Atta-Mills’ accomplishment (assuming he does well) lay
in his temperament - in his grasp of Ghana (more the
implications of its history and culture), his
resilience, hopefulness and eagerness to act, in his
inclusiveness and curiosity, and his dexterity as a
democratic dancer. Atta-Mills, by his long association
with Rawlings, doesn’t come from the sunnier side of
Ghanaian political character – he is simultaneously a
mixture of Busia, Liman, and Kufour, as opposed to
Rawlings and the sterner, more punitive traditions of
Nkrumah.
Atta-Mills has a progressive agenda – universal health,
universal education, youth employment, decentralization,
public sanitation, worker retraining, family values, for
example - and believes it is Accra’s job to carry it
out. Atta-Mills knows that the Nkrumah era of lavish big
Daddy government is not possible model in the 2000s.
Ghana has more deficits to deal with and Atta-Mills will
take office under immense fiscal constraints. These
limitations are expected to empower Atta-Mills’ stronger
side – in propping up the private sector, establishing
programs for students, or giving small businesses
incentives.
It will be quickly seen how the demands of development,
increasing population, the flowering challenges of
democracy and freedoms, and the increasing threats of
regional security may square with some of the designs
that Atta-Mills worked in the campaign – famously the
themes of “change.” Again and again in debate, campaigns
and speeches, Atta-Mills talked about the need for
Ghanaians to find in themselves “change.” The word was
borrowed from the American President-elect Barack Obama
– “Change we can,” in an America that was messed up by
eight years of the George Bush presidency.
Ghana hasn’t gone through the trauma that America has
such as the Iraq and Afghanistan wars on terror and the
9/11 terrorists attacks. Atta-Mills “change” has more to
do with the fatigue and the perceived arrogance
emanating from the eight years of the Kufour years. That
makes the Atta-Mills “change” a mantra not necessarily a
therapeutic concept but the periodic reinvention of
Ghana, where Ghanaians, for the past 17 years dig out of
their deepest problems and every four years elect a new
government. It is a way they save themselves from some
useless politicians and institutions, decline,
stagnation and other developmental challenges.
Tain was the epic of all these. The Ghanaian epic is
reinventions: Nkrumah couldn’t drive democracy through
enormous challenges and transformed it to one-party
system, the long military junta rots and general
discontent saw the little known Rawlings emerging and
stabilizing the system, and, under immense pressure,
re-introduced democracy, and Kufour remarkably
fertilizing democracy and freedoms.
Every time there are elections, as of the Atta-Mills, it
brings Ghana a new self-awareness and broadened
democracy. It brings inclusion – democratic enlargement
toward more democratic enlargement, freedoms nurturing
toward more freedoms. The Atta-Mills “change,” if it
succeeds, will bring democracy and freedoms to full
harvest, to power and to responsibility that Atta-Mills
and associate clamoured for. This is despite the fact
that little was heard from Atta-Mills about democracy
and freedoms.
At 64 years, Atta-Mills saw the struggles for freedoms
and democracy, their afterglow and triumph, their mess
up by thoughtless elites/leaders, and the various
attempts to re-invent democracy and freedoms, and now
grown in unprecedented feat in the past 17 years. Yet,
democracy and freedoms are still toddlers and need
nurturing – Atta-Mills’ “change,” if properly rehearsed,
may be part of the food to nurture democracy and
freedoms – this will be his generation’s gift to Ghana.
For the next four years, Atta-Mills will carry the
Ghanaian spirit of democracy and freedoms. Atta-Mills
will come down to the Golden Jubilee House in Accra
rejoicing, parading and bringing the Ghanaian
possessions – goodness, energy, rule of law, traditions,
freedoms, democracy, ideals, luck – like treasure to his
new home.
Kofi Akosah-Sarpong,
Canada, January 5, 2009
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