Audio By Carbonatix
Political scientist, Dr Kwame Asah-Asante has disagreed with assertions that if the former Trades Minister, Alan Kyerematen runs as an independent candidate, he will be a third force.
This, he explained is because he doubts the likelihood of having a third force in the country’s politics any time soon, adding that “It will take a very long time” for that to be possible.
Speaking in an interview on Joy FM’s Top Story on Wednesday, he said although he can cause a stir in the election process by depriving a particular party of winning or causing a run-off, it is not possible for him to win.
Dr Asah-Asante’s comments come after political analyst, Dr. Kobby Mensah, suggested that should Mr Kyerematen decide to run as an independent candidate, he will be a formidable third force following his withdrawal from the NPP flagbearership race on Tuesday, September 5.
Dr. Mensah shared the view that Mr Kyerematen could win the support of Ghanaians who have become disenchanted with the political duopoly of the NPP and NDC.
He noted that unlike other smaller parties and their often not-widely-known candidates, Alan Kyerematen’s political profile is well-known across the country and he enjoys considerable goodwill from Ghanaians.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Top Story, he said, “The country itself, I mean, you hear quite a lot of people unhappy with what you call the duopoly where you have the NDC and NPP changing the baton every now and then and so most people have actually expressed that kind of opinion that there must be a third force.
“In the past whenever we have had a certain third force, it hadn’t naturally been to the level where you think they can wrestle power. Obviously, we had Abu Sakara being a very formidable candidate for CPP, and at some point, we had Papa Kwesi Nduom for CPP as well. Very formidable.
“But they couldn’t actually make the kind of impact that we thought. Papa Kwesi Nduom went on to establish the PPP and still could not actually make the kind of impact that we were expecting.”
Also the Executive Director and Head of Polling at Global Info Analytics, Dr Musah Dankwah, has stated that should Mr Kyerematen decide to go independent, there is the possibility of him being the kingmaker.
But the political scientist has shared a contrary view on the matter.
According to Dr Asah-Asante, research has shown that from 1992, this has not materialised. "We did a search from 1992 up to the 2020 election and if you put all the small political parties together, the y are average, they have not gone beyond four per cent.
"So it doesn’t matter how (much) giant you are, once you join that bandwagon, and you deceive yourself into believing that you will win the election, I am afraid you should think twice.”
Latest Stories
-
Black Queens are ‘doing extremely well’ – Björkegren on 2025 year review
10 seconds -
Act 1122 reshapes GSA as Prof Gyampo outlines tough discipline, cost reforms and 2026 priorities
5 minutes -
Ghana gets $10.5m for qualifying for World Cup 2026
6 minutes -
GHAMRO explains GH¢123.82 royalty payment to Fancy Gadam
7 minutes -
PPI for November 2025 falls to 12.3%
7 minutes -
Techiman police arrest 25 in major swoop; drugs seized
14 minutes -
Love in marriage goes beyond sex – Rev. Daniel Annan
15 minutes -
GSA records major regulatory, infrastructure gains under Prof. Gyampo’s leadership
15 minutes -
Housing remains central to my reset agenda – Mahama
17 minutes -
You’re not a presidential material – Atta-Akyea to Ken Agyapong
23 minutes -
All set for the ultimate Boxing Day hangout: Joy FM Family Party in the Park is almost here
24 minutes -
Western Region chiefs push for full rubber export ban, say restrictions are not enough
26 minutes -
Ghana’s Rice Story: Where we are, what must change, and why it matters to all of us
37 minutes -
Education Ministry denies reports of 13th-month salary proposal for teachers
38 minutes -
Parliamentary Committee moves to save rubber industry as GREL factory closure looms
39 minutes
