Assin North by-election full results
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Head of European Studies at the University of Ghana, Dr. Kwame Asah-Asante says the outcome of Tuesday’s by-election in the Assin North constituency of the Central Region did not come to him as a surprise.

He said he had expected the National Democratic Congress (NDC) candidate to win, even without a focused study, saying that among other things, the prevailing economic situation is a big determinant in an election and in a swing constituency, it is not about inducements.

The NDC candidate, James Gyakye Quayson emerged winner with 57.56% of votes, with the NPP’s Charles Opoku coming second with 42.15% and the Liberal Party of Ghana’s Enyonam Bernice Sefenu making only 0.29%.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kc0FTDrp_LM

Reviewing the poll a day after the Electoral Commission declared Quayson winner, Dr. Asah-Asante said intimidation, lies, harassment, deception and bribery do not win anybody any election.

It is rather the power of the people that wins elections, he explained, and said when the people make up their minds, nothing else matters as the “people will vote the way they want to vote.”

Dr. Asah-Asante, a political scientist, said the message of Quayson being a likely jail candidate as propagated by the New Patriotic Party were meant to intimidate voters, however, they were not worried and did as they pleased when they got to the voting booths.

Read also: Assin North by-election: The money NPP and NDC have spent can construct 30 factories – Kofi Akpaloo

“There, they cannot feel the threat of intimidation and they are there alone, and they have the right to exercise their mind,” he said Wednesday morning on JoyNews.

Dr. Asah-Asante said Gyakye Quayson emerged unfazed by all manner of negative stories against him, including claims that he ran away out of Ghana to Canada

He said while the NDC and NPP accused each other of bribery of voters, he thought the NDC did better in their campaigning.

He said in any election, three things - resource, strategy and message (RSM) are critical to electoral fortunes and that it was obvious the NDC had resources, had a good strategy by sending an advanced party into the constituency before moving its whole campaign machinery, including bringing down former President John Mahama and other party gurus to effectively campaign.

When it comes to message, he said apart from the NDC homing in on the economy, which he described as a most important consideration for voters, the promise of infrastructure development was another message that sat well with the people.

The promised of MP’s share of the Common Fund, messages of hope that Quayson was not going to jail, as well as the NDC’s (Asiedu Nketiah) encouragement to the constituents not to reject whatever goodies the NPP brought to them but to take same and yet vote according to their conscience, resonated well.

He said while the NPP did similar things, including actually initiating infrastructure development such as fixing the roads overnight, but he said that midnight development came too late and constituted a deception and so failed to jell with the people. It also played into the hands of the NDC as a propagandist ploy to win votes.

He said the dynamics for the recent Kumawu by-election where the NPP won were different.

Kumawu is an NPP stronghold where message did not matter. In a stronghold, he said, people vote on party ideology, party affiliation and party attachment.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:  
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.