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Thursday, April 18, 2024

NDC Pushes For ‘No’ Vote In DCE Election

Samuel Ofosu-Ampofo

The
opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) has made a shocking U-turn on the
election of metropolitan, municipal and district chief executives (MMDCEs),
saying it is no longer interested in their election.

The
party is now asking the public to vote against the proposed amendment of
Article 55 (3) of the 1992 Constitution which will make the position of MMDCEs
electable and local government elections partisan.

At
a press conference yesterday, NDC National Chairman Samuel Ofosu-Ampofo said
the local government system should remain non-partisan and that individuals
should contest the District Assembly and Unit Committee elections on their own
merit.

“We
in the NDC want you to vote NO to stop the plan to introduce multi-party
participation in the Local Government System in Ghana. We, therefore, decided
to campaign for a NO vote at the referendum and to urge all Ghanaians to vote
NO at the referendum.

“The
consequence of exporting this polarization into the District Assemblies is that
very soon in our villages, there will be ‘NDC Communal Labour Day’ and ‘NPP
Communal Labour Day’. There will also be ‘NDC market’ and ‘NPP market’ and so
on and so forth,” Mr. Ofosu-Ampofo stated.

He
claimed without any proof that the NPP government “has deliberately been
misleading people into believing that the referendum is on the election of
MMDCEs.”

Confused NDC

On
one breadth, the NDC said the National Executive Committee of the party had
affirmed the long held position of the party that MMDCEs should be elected but
yesterday turned around to say, “We, however, urge all Ghanaians to vote NO at
the referendum because we strongly believe elections at the district and unit
committee levels must remain non-partisan.”

“The
needless NDC-NPP polarization at the national level should
not be extended into the District Assemblies and Unit Committees, which is what
will happen if we vote YES to make the local government system partisan,” the
NDC chairman said, adding “our support for the election of MMDCEs has changed.”

“If the government insists on making the assemblies partisan, then a new bill must be drafted, re-gazetted and subjected to serious scrutiny by Ghanaians, unlike the surreptitious manner it has gone about the current Constitution (Amendment) Bill, 2018.”

By Nana Kwasi

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