Audio By Carbonatix
President Akufo-Addo has said members 8th Parliament of the Fourth Republic would have to work together and be more accommodating of each other so that the Minority and Majority sides will work in the interest of Ghanaians.
Delivering the last State of the Nation Address (SONA) to end his first term in office, President Akufo-Addo said the results of the parliamentary elections of December 7 show Ghanaians want the two sides to work together.
“Mr Speaker the next Parliament won’t be anything like this one which ends tomorrow. I do not suggest that it is not going to be busy, but the sitting arrangement, decibel levels of sounds from the House will certainly be different,” the President said.
“The good people of Ghana have spoken and given Parliament an almost equal strength on both sides of the House. We have no choice but to work with the consequences of the desires of the people.”
Thus far, the NPP suffered the most casualty at the polls as more than 30 incumbent MPs were rejected by their constituents.
The two major parties in the country have equal seats – 137- in the House with the Fomena seat being won by an independent candidate.President Akufo-Addo has said the 8th Parliament would have to be more accommodating as the Minority and Majority work in the interest of Ghanaians.
Delivering the last State of the Nation Address (SONA) to end his first term in office, he said the parliamentary results of the December 7, election shows Ghanaians want the two sides to work closely.
“Mr Speaker the next Parliament won’t be anything like this one which ends tomorrow. I do not suggest that it is not going to be busy, but the sitting arrangement, decibel levels of sounds from the House will certainly be different.
“The good people of Ghana have spoken and given Parliament an almost equal strength on both sides of the House. We have no choice but to work with the consequences of the desires of the people,” he said Tuesday.
Both the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) have so far failed to attain a clear majority in Parliament after the December 7, election.
Thus far, the NPP suffered the most losses at the polls as more than 30 incumbent MPs were rejected by their constituents.
The two major parties in the country will have an equal number of seats in the next parliament – 137 – in the next parliament with the Fomena seat being won by an independent candidate, who is expected to sit with the NPP side.
“The 8th Parliament must have to devise a way of conducting its business in the good interest of Ghana’s developing democracy,” President Akufo-Addo said.
Latest Stories
-
Warner Bros $111bn sale to Paramount approved by US Justice Department
43 minutes -
Thomas Partey’s Canada visa denial unfair, overreaction and wrong – Kofi Adams
1 hour -
FIFA issues disclaimer after Canada denies Thomas Partey entry
1 hour -
Karpowership Ghana plants 1,000 trees in Western Region as Forestry Commission urges protection of seedlings
2 hours -
‘We want to make Ghana proud’ – Jordan Ayew
2 hours -
Photos: Black Stars arrive in Providence for final phase of World Cup preparations
2 hours -
Deal to end fighting would lead to Hormuz reopening, Iran says
3 hours -
Bellingham, but no Guehi – England’s expected team
4 hours -
What you need to know as millions of SpaceX shares go up for sale
4 hours -
Ghana to seek review of Canada’s visa decision on Thomas Partey
5 hours -
KGL Foundation renovates Accra Psychiatric Hospital OPD
5 hours -
Zoomlion, NADMO deploy officers across Greater Accra to sustain anti-flood campaign
6 hours -
AG challenges Appiah-Kubi’s bid to withdraw from Wontumi case
6 hours -
The studio and one-bedroom advantage: Why smaller units are outperforming villas in Accra in 2026
6 hours -
How to buy off-plan in Accra without losing your money: A diaspora due diligence guide for 2026
6 hours