Audio By Carbonatix
The 80 MPs who have demanded the replacement of the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta have slammed the Minority in Parliament for the Censure Motion against the minister, and repeated their call for his resignation.
According to a source in the group, the ongoing censure motion by the Minority was not the path to go as the case against the Finance Minister is not one that borders on criminality or unconstitutional dealings.
“Right from the onset we were against the Censure Motion by the NDC and cautioned the Minority in Parliament against going on that path since the challenges our economy is facing requires a very dispassionate assessment devoid of blind partisanship. This is a period for us to justify the confidence reposed in us by our constituents and treat issues in a very serious and selfless manner,” the source stated.
The source said attempts by the Minority to introduce a Censure Motion at a time the Group had already called on the President to change the Finance Minister was an act made in bad faith adding that the censure motion by the Minority was clearly intended to muddy the waters and take credit for the selflessness demonstrated by the Group of 80 MPs to call for the replacement of one of their own to save the Ghanaian economy.
“Indeed, the Minority is reeling from the guilt of having failed to make such a move and stimulate such discussions during their time in power when there were harsh economic circumstances with many calling for the replacement of the Finance Minister then, Seth Terkper. They obviously see this act of selflessness by the Group of 80 as a threat and therefore, wish to take undue credit and score cheap political points,” the source added.
The source explained that their call for the replacement of the Finance Minister was a difficult and painful one, but had to be selflessly made to help restore hope to the economy and calm nerves of millions of Ghanaian suffering the brunt of harsh economic realities.
“We have made this call with a lot of difficulty and pain because we have had to look within our ranks as we seek to face the crisis head-on with the urgency it requires. We have refused to lay blame at the door of others even though we could have, because of the poor economic legacy the Mahama Administration had left behind,” the source stated.
The source said the Group would still boycott the presentation of the budget if the finance minister is not replaced.
Latest Stories
-
WHO Sounds Alarm: Africa falling behind as only 58 countries eliminate neglected tropical diseases
12 minutes -
Ghanaian journalist Dela Aglanu wins top award at inaugural Global South Video News Awards in Abu Dhabi
17 minutes -
E&P, Azumah Resources sign $37.5m deal with FLSmidth to accelerate gold projects
19 minutes -
Corona Sunset Session: A golden reset for Accra’s overworked young professionals
27 minutes -
EOCO confirms arrest of notorious cybercriminal Abu Trica in $8m romance-scam
32 minutes -
Finance minister calls for more aggressive and proactive tax collection
54 minutes -
Qatar invites African countries for knowledge-sharing in tournament hosting
57 minutes -
GPL 2025/26: Aduana FC beat Lions in Kpando to go top
59 minutes -
Extradition of Ghanaian suspects from the US may not be ‘very quick’ – US Embassy explains why
1 hour -
Songs In Conversation closes out 2025 with intimate 99 Phaces session
1 hour -
Ghana Tourism Authority to launch ‘100 Years of Highlife’ celebration
2 hours -
NACSA engages CSOs on implementation of Gun Amnesty Programme
2 hours -
Fire destroys two-bedroom apartment at Tsito–Awudome Gborkorpe
2 hours -
Ghana to capitalize on World Cup to attract investment into sports tourism – Kofi Adams
2 hours -
Parents call for return of corporal punishment to address indiscipline in schools
3 hours
