Audio By Carbonatix
The Chairman of the Council of Elders of the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP), Hackman Owusu-Agyeman, says now-independent candidate, John Alan Kwadwo Kyerematen, would be welcomed back into the party should he decide to return to its fold.
According to him, while it is too late for the independent candidate to make a U-turn, for him to be re-accepted, he would have to reapply for membership.
Alan Kwadwo Kyerematen on Monday formally resigned from the NPP citing unfair treatment from party leadership and the hijacking of the party by some select few.
He also announced his intention to contest the 2024 presidential elections as an independent candidate promising to lead a youth-driven, youth-centered campaign.
Some political analysts have stated that his departure from the party and his subsequent decision to contest the 2024 presidential elections on a solo ticket could adversely affect the electoral fortunes of the NPP.
Speaking on JoyFM’s Top Story, Hackman Owusu-Agyeman said “I think it’s too late. Whatever damage he intended to cause he has already caused. And we will live with it and we will overcome it. It’s not a difficulty at all.”
Concerning Alan’s possible return, he described the presidential candidate as a prodigal son.
“If he wants to come the rules are very clear. He has said openly that he has resigned, if he wants to come back he has to reapply. The rules are there in Article 3. So he would have to do that.
“He’s welcome to come, we need the numbers, a party is made up of the numbers, we’re not pushing anybody away. All of them are coming over, I’m not a priest but there’s something called a prodigal son, if you go out and you want to come you’re welcome,” he said.
He further added that Alan’s assertion that he intends to heal and change the body politic of the nation is unachievable if he goes solo.
“And I don’t think he’s going to – with his butterfly – be the one who’s going to ‘revolutionarise’ political thinking and political activities in this country. He must come back. If he has erred, we will look at it, consider it and bring him back,” he said.
This is not the first time Alan is quitting the party. After the 2007 presidential primaries where he contested against Akufo-Addo, he raised issues with the process and went ahead to resign.
However, after the party promised to address his concerns, he returned to the NPP, only to resign again and this time around decide to contest the national election as an independent candidate.
Latest Stories
-
Dr John Dawson Writes: Ghana’s Telecom Gamble
9 minutes -
BoG warns against weak financial market documentation
21 minutes -
WHO to hold emergency committee meeting as Ebola death toll rises to 131
29 minutes -
Ablekuma North Ranked Ghana’s Best-Performing District in Multidimensional Poverty Index
36 minutes -
GIPS hails new value for money legislation, urges swift passage of Procurement Practicing Bill
45 minutes -
ASAC 2026: The finish line through the lens
47 minutes -
Agenda 111 should not be abandoned because of change in government – Dr Nsiah-Asare
47 minutes -
Sports Minister Kofi Adams challenges Queiroz to get best out of Black Stars
48 minutes -
Ghana must tread cautiously on the Gold Fields Tarkwa Lease debate
50 minutes -
Agenda 111 was properly funded and designed to address healthcare gaps — Dr Nsiah-Asare insists
1 hour -
Supreme Court admits 14 CSOs in OSP’s constitutionality case
1 hour -
Nhyira FM’s Ohemaa Benewaa marks ‘The Threshold’ birthday with outreach, launches Women’s Wave Empowerment
1 hour -
On announces NIL partnership with University of Louisville track standout Elsingi Kipruto
1 hour -
Judiciary Committee pledges support for courts and legal education in Upper West Region
1 hour -
Hopeson Adorye calls for one-year ban on small-scale mining to combat galamsey
2 hours