Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority in Parliament says it yet to decide if it will participate in discussions concerning the 2020 State of the Nation’s Address (SONA) delivered by President Nana Akufo-Addo on Thursday.
This comes after the Majority in Parliament vowed to disallow them to participate in any debates associated with the fourth SONA presented to the House after they walked out of the House.

- Inusah Fuseini is MP for Tamale Central
During an interview on Joy FM’s Top Stories, legislator for Tamale Central, Inusah Abdulai Fuseini indicated that the opposition’s walkout does not mean, it will exclude itself from discussing the President’s Address.
In response to whether the Minority will participate in discussions concerning the Address since they walked out, Mr Fuseini said, “we are yet to decided.”
“You don’t have to listen to the President to debate his speech. [Besides,] there is no principle in Parliament that says that when you walk out of Parliament on the President or any other person you cannot debate what the person has said,” he clarified.
He noted that the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) in 2013 boycotted the former President John Dramani Mahama’s first SONA but that did not prevent them from debating it.
“They [the Majority] think that per their own personal idiosyncrasies they can rewrite the orders of Parliament.”
He further dared: “I challenge anybody to show me an order of parliament, a principle established by parliamentary practice that when you refuse to take part in SONA you cannot debate it.”
The Minority on Thursday staged a walkout protest ahead of the President’s SONA.
Last week, the opposition promised to boycott the 2020 State of the Nation Address should government fail to release some five per cent of the District Assemblies’ Common Fund.
Commenting on this, Mr Fuseini revealed that the reason stated earlier by the Minority was just a ruse since there were more critical issues happening in the country than ‘five per cent Common Fund.
“The issue of boycotting the SONA was never about Common Fund not being paid. But we are living in Parliament we know what Parliamentarians can do.
“They [Majority] try to second guess your intentions and bring people closer to you to know what you are thinking. But this time they never got to know what we were planning,” he said.
- Kojo Oppong Nkrumah is the Information Minister
Information Minister, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, on the other hand, was disappointed at the actions of the Minority in Parliament.
“I think it is an embarrassing thing that has happened today, we need to pull the brick at this point in time and ensure that these things that have the tendency to undermine the pillars of our democracy are stopped. And that we all come around the table and do the proper thing,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Clarion Clarkewoode returns with mew Afrobeats single, ‘AyƐ Kwa’
9 minutes -
GES concludes probe into Savelugu SHS feeding incident after viral video
14 minutes -
Victoria Ivy Obeng drops debut gospel EP dubbed ‘My Passion’
16 minutes -
Government lifts curfew on Binduri Township following return of calm
21 minutes -
DVLA publishes 2026 service fees to ensure transparency
22 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: Maintaining leadership visibility during execution
24 minutes -
Aid workers missing after airstrikes hit South Sudan hospital
25 minutes -
Love language beyond words: Showing care through smart money moves
27 minutes -
AfCFTA will fail Africa’s youth without free movement of talent – NYA CEO Osman Ayariga
32 minutes -
MTN Ghana partners Thrive & Shine to accelerate AI literacy and empower Ghanaian youth
39 minutes -
Russian general shot several times in Moscow
53 minutes -
Ministry of Gender and UNFPA observe International Day of Zero Tolerance for FGM in Ghana
55 minutes -
Japanese-backed KUMON programme transforms maths learning at Ebenezer Baptist Christian School
1 hour -
Nkawie SHTS receives two-year ban for misconduct at Ashanti Inter-School Athletics
1 hour -
FGM remains a serious concern in Ghana despite legal gains – Gender Ministry, UNFPA warn
1 hour
