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JJ set to take over NDC?

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Politics of Tuesday, 31 January 2017

Source: Al-hajj

2017-01-31

The aL-hAJJ is reliably informed of moves by former President Jerry John Rawlings and his hirelings to force a take-over of the leadership and management of the opposition National Democratic Congress from its present handlers.

Known for his adroit covert political antics, mostly denied at its initial stages, the ceremonial NDC founder, according to intelligence available to this paper, is backing cadres and so-called members of 31st December Movement who are moving round the country mobilizing NDC supporters in the name of reorganization of the biggest opposition party.

In his recent interaction with the Volta Caucus of the Minority side in Parliament, Mr Rawlings spoke bitterly of how the NDC “has been ambushed and held hostage” by persons he failed to name, insisting that “the time has come to free the truth.”

“What our supporters need is candor. If you want them to stay united, if you want them to be a little strong, all you can offer them now is candor. Don’t engage in political talk (whatever that means) of the past,” the former President stated.

Though Functional Executive Committee of the NDC has set up a 13 member Committee led by Professor Kwesi Botchwey to investigate why the party performed miserably in last December elections and, to make recommendations on the way forward for the party, Mr Rawlings and his men are reported averse to this move.

Sources close to the NDC founder have disclosed to this paper that the former military strongman believes the present handlers of the party want to use the committee to hide their failures in order to perpetuate their stay in office.

In order to checkmate this supposed scheming by the Kofi Portuphy-led National Executives of the NDC, Mr Rawlings is reported to have given his blessings to two groups to go for the jugular in a bid to “rescue the party.”

The NDC Founder has however deny claims suggesting he is scheming to take over the party, “I wish I could say yes, but I think it sounds better in my ear to say that I want God to come and lead us because of the integrity factor. God can be found in the truth.”

Nonetheless, The aL-hAJJ has gathered that a new think tank, the Crusade for Probity and Accountability, and a group calling itself Coalition for Rejuvenation and Reorganizing of the NDC (CCR), mainly made up of known allies of Mr Rawlings, have since emerged ostensibly to help in reorganization of the party to position it battle ready for 2020.

Addressing a news conference in Accra last week, spokesperson of CCR, Kunkum Ampiah, kicked against decision on the formation of the Prof Kwesi Botchwey-led Committee, insisting that the reorganization of the NDC should be the prime focus of the party instead of investigating what led to the party’s defeat.

“We do not need a fact-finding committee to explain December 7. We lost because hundreds of thousands of our members and supporters boycotted the polls for years of neglect by the leadership and some arrogant and ineffective election campaigners,” Mr. Ampiah stated.

Citing reasons for the party’s defeat, Mr. Ampiah said “our members and supporters say the party (NDC) abandoned its grassroots base – working people, youth, women and indigenous business people once it got power.”

“Instead of policies, programs and institutions to uplift this considerable and important constituency, our government offered only spin.”

“Our members and supporters say the party’s presidential and parliamentary campaigns sidelined experienced hands and party organs in favor of inexperienced and unaccountable appointees, relatives and friends.”

Touching on the rationale behind the formation of the group, Mr. Ampiah said “we have come together because of the crushing defeat of our party in both presidential and parliamentary elections on December 7 and the leadership collapse that it has exposed.”

Even before the NDC handed over power to the NPP, Crusade for Probity and Accountability also organized press conference, demanding the resignation of all national executives for overseeing the worst defeat of a sitting government under Ghana’s fourth republic.

“In the interest of the party, the national leadership should offer the best Christmas gift to the party especially its grassroots supporters by communicating to the council of elders their decisions to step aside en bloc at the earliest day possible,” the Convener of the group, Dr. Kwesi Djokoto, said at its inaugural press conference in December last year.

The two groups have been reiterating long held view of former President Rawlings that the current leadership of the NDC has drifted from the core principles and values on which the party was formed.

Mr Rawlings has since, the return of NDC to power in 2009; been having running battles with leading members of his own party, with his wife breaking away from the NDC to form her own party and succeeded in contesting the last presidential election.

Both Mr and Mrs Rawlings have never spared officials of the NDC, including the late President Mills and former President John Mahama. Some have alleged Rawlings worked with the NPP to defeat the NDC.

The NDC founder was conspicuously missing in the party’s 2012 and 2016 campaigns. When he was offered opportunity to speak at the NDC’s campaign launch at Cape Coast in the Central Region on Sunday, August 14, 2016, Mr Rawlings said “the task ahead of you won’t be an easy task. I will reserve what I have to say till after the elections when I will come round the country to share with you how I think we could restore the kind of strength that can take us well into the future. There are certain weaknesses that we need to deal with.”

This statement, some political pundits have observed, was to send a signal to the NDC that Mr Rawlings was indifferent to the party’s victory in the last election and only wanted “the party to lose so he could find ways to use his assigns to take over the party.”

This however, dovetails into present goings-on in the NDC over who becomes the fulcrum around which the party will revolve going into the next election.

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