Audio By Carbonatix
Dean of Armed Forces Command and Staff College, Dr Vladimir Antwi-Danso has advised President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to consider appointing technocrats with knowledge in governance in his next administration.
This, he said, would promote good governance and pragmatism to consolidate his legacy and gains in the first term of his administration.
Dr Antwi-Danso, also an International Affairs Expert, gave the advice in an interview with the Ghana News Agency in Accra.
"Considering the nature of the 2020 election results and the kind of Parliament we will have in terms of numbers and complexity…what President Akufo-Addo can do to consolidate his legacy is to bring on board more technocrats and people who understand governance to promote issue-based governance system.
"The kind of bickering, polemics and partisan nature of our politics should give way to consensus building and pragmatism," Dr Antwi-Danso, added.
"We need people who are forward-looking, real patriots and love Ghana, and not people who only shout because of their political parties' interest," he continued.
"And when the positive results begin to show, it will shape our democracy and Ghana will be the ultimate beneficiary".
He also underscored the need to allow state institutions to work according to the remit of the law and refrain from tagging them with political colours.
Dr Antwi-Danso said the appointment of the heads of state institutions should also not be conterminous with the tenure of governments so that they can continue to operate even after a particular administration is no longer in power.
Over 13 million Ghanaians on Monday, December 7, 2020 elected a President and 275 parliamentarians for a four-year term, beginning, January 07, 2021.
Incumbent President, Akufo-Addo was elected as the 8th President of the Fourth Republic after the Electoral Commission (EC) declared 51.3 per cent of the total valid votes cast in his favour. He beat the main opposition leader and former President John Dramani Mahama, who had 47.4 per cent of total valid votes.
Mr Mahama has refused to concede defeat, describing the election results as "flawed".
Meanwhile, domestic and international election observer missions described the electoral process as free, fair and transparent.
Latest Stories
-
Egypt’s FA wants World Cup ‘Pride Match’ plans cancelled
59 minutes -
Suspect in custody after student killed in Kentucky university shooting
3 hours -
Kounde scores twice to give Barcelona victory at Camp Nou
3 hours -
Chelsea’s qualification hopes hit by a loss at Atalanta
3 hours -
Fifa accused of breaching own rules with Trump award
3 hours -
Big result for Slot and Liverpool with no Salah in Milan
3 hours -
The Inconvenient Truth: Deliverism not the Barracks must hold Africa together
3 hours -
We’ll work with what we have to please our customers – ECG assures after tariff cutback
4 hours -
Zaha in Ivory Coast AFCON squad but Adingra left out
4 hours -
Messi wins historic back-to-back MLS MVP awards
4 hours -
More clubs could face European expulsion after UEFA ruling
5 hours -
Lithuania declares emergency situation over Belarus balloons
5 hours -
Trump criticises ‘decaying’ European countries and ‘weak’ leaders
5 hours -
Afroquality announces ‘Becoming Us’ – a first-of-its-kind PanAfrican micro series redefining how brands tell African stories
5 hours -
Government’s reduction of Lithium Royalty Rate from 10% to 5% raises serious concerns – APL
6 hours
