Audio By Carbonatix
The National Council of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) has unanimously dismissed a petition by nine aspirants asking for the party’s Special Delegates Conference to whittle down the number of presidential aspirants scheduled for Saturday, August 26, to be at a centralised venue.
This was after a crunch meeting was held at the Alisa Hotel on Thursday, July 20.
According to the Council, the party’s constitution and precedent set in 2014 is paramount and ought to be respected.
Addressing journalists, General Secretary of the party, Justin Kodua Frimpong said the party will go ahead with its planned decentralised election.
“As you are aware, the National Executive Committee earlier met and now the National Council has also just concluded their meeting and key amongst the discussions that went on today had to do with the venue for our special delegates college because per our constitution, if after close of nomination and vetting we have more than five aspirants, the constitution stipulates that we have a special delegates college to trim the number to five.”
“So the vetting committee submitted their recommendations to the National Council and the National Council has unanimously approved of the recommendations by the committee, and the other issue was the venue for the special delegates college and after debates amongst ourselves, we came to the conclusion that the precedent set in 2014 should hold.”
The nine flagbearer hopefuls excluding Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia have argued that a centralised election would be more efficient and transparent.
They insisted that plans to allow only 900 delegates to vote at the regional level do not sit well with them.
However, their arguments did not find favour with the second highest decision making body of the party.
The NPP will on Saturday, August 26, cut down the list of its presidential aspirants from 10 to five as stipulated in its constitution.
Ahead of that, the party says a new register will be needed for the exercise to weed out those who have passed away and those who are no longer available as delegates.
General Secretary Justin Koduah had earlier assured that the new register will be out by the end of the week.
“We are in the final stage of doing the compilation. Basically, we are not going to exceed 1,000, so between 900 and 1,000 delegates will form the special electoral college.”
“Some of the founding members have died, so we have to take their names out. We also have to look at past national officers. I am sure before the week ends we should have the final list for the special delegates’ election,” he stated.
Latest Stories
-
Togbe Afede XIV lauds government’s $10bn ‘big push’ programme for boosting farm produce transport
41 minutes -
FDA urges consumers to prioritise safety when purchasing products during festive season
45 minutes -
President Mahama calls for single-digit interest rates on agricultural loans
58 minutes -
President Mahama urges Ghanaians in formal jobs to take up farming
1 hour -
Farming interventions paying off, lifting incomes and food security, says Agric minister
1 hour -
Gov’t pledges science-backed interventions in agriculture, says Agric minister
2 hours -
Ghana unveils $3.4bn plan to accelerate national clean energy transition
2 hours -
Interior minister urges security agencies to maximise use of new NSB regional command in Ho
2 hours -
Photos: Ghana celebrates 41st National Farmers’ Day
2 hours -
2025 Farmer’s Day: Farmers demand a 2% interest rate on loans to boost farming activities
2 hours -
Chamber of Aquaculture Ghana calls for strong public-private partnerships to unlock finance and transform the sector
3 hours -
Lions celebrate International Volunteer Day with over decades of service and impact
3 hours -
3 dead, dozens injured in Mampong Abuontem head-on collision
3 hours -
MoFFA shuts down several Eastern Region mortuaries over poor sanitation, non-compliance
3 hours -
Domestic violence case: John Odartey Lamptey remanded over alleged brutal assault on wife
3 hours
