Audio By Carbonatix
The governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) says it will outdoor its manifesto on August 22 ahead of the 2020 general elections.
The Dr. Bawumia-led Committee drafted the policy document in the hope that Ghanaians will retain the party for another four years.
According to the NPP General Secretary, John Boadu, the Steering Committee will sit and finalise the manifesto on August 11, 2020; three days ahead of the launch.
Mr. Boadu said that President Akufo-Addo's government has delivered promises made to Ghanaians in the lead up to the 2016 Presidential and Parliamentary polls.
He said the manifesto contained key policies that will help consolidate Ghana's development.
The NPP is confident that the yet-to-be-outdoor campaign promises will get the party's mandate renewed.
Latest Stories
-
Volta Regional Minister assures PAC of stricter supervision of government projects
11 minutes -
Can Parliament enforce its own laws?
43 minutes -
ECG announces major transformer upgrade at Batsonaa – see the affected areas
44 minutes -
Ghanaian released after 77 days in Burkinabe detention
52 minutes -
Football Noise, Economic Silence
53 minutes -
Replacing Haruna and Muntaka in Parliament was strategic for Election 2024 – Asiedu Nketia, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu explain the plot
1 hour -
Security service recruitment medical results to be released next week – Interior Minister
1 hour -
Ghana’s tech prodigies set for Geneva after triumphant ‘Robotics for Good’ national qualifiers
1 hour -
World Bank document shows 27 countries seeking to ensure access to crisis funds
1 hour -
Mahama says Ghana’s IMF programme was close to derailment before he took over
1 hour -
Uganda confirms 3 new Ebola cases, bringing total to 5
1 hour -
Senegal president sacks PM Sonko, dissolves government after months of friction
2 hours -
Security recruitment medical results to be released next week – Interior Minister
2 hours -
Mahama rules out IMF ‘kenkey and waakye parties’, takes swipe at erstwhile Akufo-Addo gov’t
2 hours -
Mahama says Ghana’s economy still needs major reforms despite IMF progress
2 hours