No Voltarian in frontline NDC leadership ‘disturbing’ – Rawlings

Former President Jerry John Rawlings has described the newly elected leadership of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) as a combination of โ€œthe good, the bad and the ugly.โ€

In an exclusive interview with Jonathan Donkor of the Ghanaian Times newspaper and published in the Thursday November 22, 2018 edition, Mr Rawlings declined to put the individuals into the aforementioned categories except to say the combination was not uncommon.

He was a โ€œlittle disturbedโ€ about the absence of an indigene of the Volta Region amongst the new frontline leaders, although the region was deemed the โ€˜world bankโ€™ of the party.

The founder of the NDC was sharing his impression of the partyโ€™s just ended National Delegatesโ€™ Congress during which, after a marathon election, a new crop of leaders were chosen.

A former vice chairperson of the party, Samuel Ofosu Ampofo grabbed the chairmanship after a keen contest with four other stalwarts of the party.

The incumbent general secretary, Johnson Asiedu Nketia, popularly called โ€œGeneral Mosquitoโ€, defeated his deputy, Koku Anyidoho to retain the position he had held for a decade.

The entire congress, the former President said was โ€œnot too bad, not too goodโ€, as a result of which the calibre of leaders were elected by the about 9,000 delegates.

He expressed his disapproval of what he described as the use of money to โ€œcorrupt the sanctity of the right of choiceโ€ at the various elections in the party adding that; โ€œthe misuse of money has undermined the force of our conviction.โ€

The practice, he said had been going on since the late former President John Evans Atta Millsโ€™ leadership and had worsened today.

โ€œThe use of money to corrupt the sanctity of the right of choice is one of the worst mistakes we could have ever made,โ€ he pointed out.

Former President Rawlings took the opportunity to clarify his unexpectedly short โ€œone sentence messageโ€ delivered at the congress.

At the Congress, he said โ€œI can imagine we would wish to bring back the spirit of the old days. But that can only happen if we cultivate the habit of listening to ourselves.โ€

While some people understood him as asking the partyโ€™s rank and file to listen to each otherโ€™s counsel, others thought he meant they should listen to their inner voice or conscience.

The latter, according to the former President, was the message he desired to send across but coded it to put the burden of โ€œfree-willโ€ on the audience.

โ€œThey were expecting me to blast them instead I put the burden of free will on them and their conscience.
โ€œWe are not listening to our inner voice, our conscience – that godly voice in our nature. If we were, we would not be making the terrible mistakes we have been making,โ€ he clarified.

To change the status quo, former President Rawlings said it was time for like-minded Ghanaians of serious integrity, devoid of their political colour and team up to form a โ€œvery dynamic movement.โ€

The movement, he said was to be a โ€œSpecial Purpose Vehicle (SPV) to propel the values of probity, accountability, social justice,โ€ stressing that it was not to be misunderstood to be a political party.

Related Articles

Back to top button