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Sunday, July 27, 2025

The Presidency that might have been: Kwabena Agyepong and the NPP’s missed opportunity

In the annals of Ghana’s Fourth Republic, the New Patriotic Party (NPP) has produced a long list of political titans, charismatic campaigners, intellectual heavyweights, and skilled tacticians. Yet, among them, one figure stands apart, not just for what he offered, but for what the party never allowed him to become: Kwabena Agyei Agyepong.

Once considered a natural successor to Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, Agyepong now evokes a different kind of memory, not of a dream realised, but of promise unfulfilled.

A former Press Secretary to President John Agyekum Kufuor and later General Secretary of the NPP, Kwabena Agyepong, was widely seen as the party’s future. Polished, articulate, and principled, he had the pedigree, the presence, and the policy focus. Despite his deep roots in the Danquah-Busia tradition, however, he was never fully embraced by the very political structure he helped shape.

His journey with the NPP began in the early 1990s, when he emerged as one of its most promising young stars. As a key figure in shaping the party’s media and communications strategy, his role in building the NPP’s public profile was instrumental. Loyal, disciplined, and intellectually grounded, Agyepong stood out for his ability to distil complex policy into messages the average Ghanaian could understand.

But it may have been this same clarity and conviction that set him apart, and ultimately cost him. In a party where loyalty to personalities increasingly overshadowed commitment to principle, Agyepong’s technocratic frankness was often perceived as a form of political defiance.

His ambition to lead the NPP was clear. In 2007, he joined a crowded field of 17 candidates vying to succeed President Kufuor as the party’s presidential nominee. His presence among the heavyweights signalled not just personal belief, but faith in the NPP’s democratic ideals.

That contest was won by Nana Akufo-Addo, who went on to lead the party to victory in the 2016 election. Kwabena Agyepong, though unsuccessful, remained committed to the NPP and continued to serve in various roles.

His election as General Secretary in 2014 marked a new chapter, one in which he sought to bring order, enforce discipline, and refocus the party on its founding ideals. But just a year later, he was suspended, accused of unilateral decision-making, despite having a constitutional mandate to act.

The suspension of Agyepong, alongside then National Chairman Paul Afoko and Second Vice Chairman Sammy Crabbe, marked a defining shift in the party. It signalled a movement away from ideological contest to a more rigid consolidation of power. In that moment, the NPP appeared less tolerant of internal dissent, even when it came from founding members with legitimate concerns.

Kwabena Agyepong’s calls for unity and respect for party structures were drowned out by suspicion and political manoeuvring.

Though he has since resurfaced at party events and declared his intent to contest the 2024 flagbearership, his campaign gained little traction. Lacking resources and institutional backing, his bid was quietly sidelined by a party machinery now shaped by entrenched factions and strategic alliances.

Despite offering a distinct message rooted in discipline, renewal, and policy, Agyepong’s voice found little resonance in a political culture increasingly swayed by populism and personality.

In a landscape where charisma, cash, and compromise often define political viability, Agyepong remains an outlier, measured, methodical, and morally grounded.

What truly distinguishes him is not just what he has done, but what he represents: a brand of leadership committed to institutional integrity, public service, and accountability. Agyepong is that rare blend of technocrat and politician, able to explain policy with clarity while challenging the excesses of his own party with candour.

Ironically, it may be this integrity that has kept him from rising to the top.

As the NPP confronts the challenge of renewal in a post-Akufo-Addo era, it must reckon with the kind of leadership it sidelined. Kwabena Agyepong may never have had the populist appeal of some of his peers, but he brought a depth and direction that could have redefined the party, and perhaps the country’s political narrative.

He is the presidential candidate the NPP never had. Yet in many ways, he remains a powerful symbol of what the party might have been.

The writer, Naa Kwaamah Siaw-Marfo, is a Broadcast Journalist with Citi FM and Channel One TV.

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