Audio By Carbonatix
Former NPP Chairman Freddie Blay is calling on members of the New Patriotic Party to close ranks following the party's January 2026 presidential primary, warning that lingering bitterness among losing camps must not be allowed to fracture the party ahead of the 2028 general election.
Speaking in an exclusive interview with Joy News' Gemma Appiah, Blay acknowledged that the primary season had been bruising for some time, but insisted that the real battle lies outside the party with the governing National Democratic Congress (NDC).
"All our arsenal should be targeted at them and not at ourselves," Blay said pointedly, referring to the NDC.
Dr Mahamudu Bawumia won the party's 2026 presidential primary on 31st January with 56.48 per cent of votes, defeating four other candidates, including Kennedy Agyapong and Dr Bryan Acheampong, in a fiercely contested race.
The veteran politician, who has been a central figure in NPP politics for decades, pushed back against any suggestion that candidates who lose internal elections have grounds to disengage or destabilise the party.
He said every candidate who steps into a primary must be prepared to justify their candidacy and to absorb the rough and tumble that comes with competitive internal politics.
"A lot of people throw stones at you, throw mud at you," he said. "I was praying very hard that it should remain a friendly fight — what I normally refer to as friendly hostilities, because after all, we are in the same party."
Blay conceded that some contestants stepped out of line during the campaign, but urged the party to move past those moments now that the elections are over.
He expressed empathy for those who came up short, noting that losing is never easy and that bitterness can linger.
"It's not easy for you to lose an election. Some could be better. The bitterness could remain with them for a while," he said. "But at the end of the day, we talk to each other."
His comments come at a delicate moment for the NPP.
Latest Stories
-
Legacy Girls’ College celebrates national recognition of two students at 2025 WASSCE
4 minutes -
Oil price jumps despite deal to release record amount of reserves
12 minutes -
Sahara Group commissions 40,000cbm Asharami Ghana LPG vessel to advance clean energy access in Ghana
20 minutes -
Ghana’s Ambassador to Côte d’Ivoire marks 69th independence day with call to ‘build prosperity and restore hope’
22 minutes -
COCOBOD to distribute 27,000 sprayers and 89,000 PPE sets to cocoa farmers
30 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour accuses NDC of ‘double standards’ over presidential travel
36 minutes -
Israel–Iran war shakes global insurance industry; Ghana may face heavy impact – Dr Kingsley Agyemang
39 minutes -
DJ Mensah calls for national support for Rapperholic UK as Sarkodie eyes O2 Arena
42 minutes -
COCOBOD disburses GH¢4.2bn to Licensed Buying Companies to settle cocoa farmers’ arrears
43 minutes -
Rebecca Ekpe launches mentorship programme for young journalists and digital creators
44 minutes -
Home Support: How we can use Ghanaians living in the diaspora to form supporter groups for the 2026 World Cup and save millions
51 minutes -
NPP communicator, Senyo Amekplenu seeks audit service expenditure details under RTI
58 minutes -
British man charged in Dubai for alleged filming of Iranian missiles
60 minutes -
The mirage of president’s special initiatives – Mahama’s “Legacy Projects”, or another monuments of waste?
1 hour -
British man charged in Dubai for alleged filming of Iranian missiles
1 hour
