Audio By Carbonatix
Inusah Fuseini, a member of the NDC’s Ayawaso East Investigative Committee, has questioned the legal basis for annulling election results that were conducted, supervised, and certified as credible by the Electoral Commission.
Speaking on JoyNews’ PM Express on Wednesday, the lawyer and former Tamale Central MP said the core issue is not whether people are angry about what happened during the NDC parliamentary primary in Ayawaso East, but whether the party has the legal authority to overturn the EC’s verdict.
“The elections were conducted and supervised by the Electoral Commission. The results were certified by the Electoral Commission as being credible in a fair and fair manner,” he said.
He explained that while the committee recommended annulment due to what it described as widespread illegality, it also warned party leadership about serious legal and practical obstacles.
“The jurisprudential issue here is, can a political party overturn the verdict of the Electoral Commission when they did not conduct the election?” he asked.
Inusah Fuseini said the committee reached what he described as a “firm conclusion” that there was widespread vote buying and inducement during the primary, and that it was “not limited to one candidate.”
“We came to the conclusion… that there was widespread illegality. I mean, the vote buying and inducement… and it was not limited to one candidate,” he stated.
He said the committee’s findings triggered a swift reaction because the actions violated multiple laws and internal party principles.
“What happened in Ayawaso East were acts of impunity because they violated the express provisions of our laws — political party act, Representation of the People’s Act CI 127… the criminal code, our Constitution,” he said, adding that it also breached the party’s “code of ethics,” “values,” and “philosophy.”
However, he cautioned that the party must not respond to wrongdoing with another potentially unlawful act.
“Do you deal with impunity by acting with impunity? Do you deal with a wrong by acting wrongly?” he asked.
Inusah Fuseini said that, from a governance perspective, annulling results certified by the EC could damage the Commission's integrity.
“Governance-wise, you will be destroying the sanctity and integrity of the Electoral Commission if you do that,” he warned.
He also pointed to the NDC’s own constitution, saying the closest provision that could be relied on is Article 52, which allows the National Executive Committee to act where a matter is not provided for.
But he noted that most political parties do not include annulment powers in their constitutions because the accepted route is legal action.
“You can do that by law, and you have to go to court,” he said.
He added that time was another hurdle, noting that the committee submitted its report at 4pm on Tuesday, but the EC’s calendar set Wednesday as the final day for presenting a candidate.
“Today is the final day to present a candidate,” he said, arguing that even if the party wanted to proceed, the issue could not be resolved within 24 hours.
Despite the concerns, he said the committee still recommended annulment, but only after highlighting the risks and constraints.
Latest Stories
-
25 MDAs sign data-sharing pact with Ghana Statistical Service
3 minutes -
Legacy Girls’ College celebrates national recognition of two students at 2025 WASSCE
10 minutes -
Oil price jumps despite deal to release record amount of reserves
18 minutes -
Sahara Group commissions 40,000cbm Asharami Ghana LPG vessel to advance clean energy access in Ghana
26 minutes -
Ghana’s Ambassador to Côte d’Ivoire marks 69th independence day with call to ‘build prosperity and restore hope’
27 minutes -
COCOBOD to distribute 27,000 sprayers and 89,000 PPE sets to cocoa farmers
36 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour accuses NDC of ‘double standards’ over presidential travel
42 minutes -
Israel–Iran war shakes global insurance industry; Ghana may face heavy impact – Dr Kingsley Agyemang
45 minutes -
DJ Mensah calls for national support for Rapperholic UK as Sarkodie eyes O2 Arena
48 minutes -
COCOBOD disburses GH¢4.2bn to Licensed Buying Companies to settle cocoa farmers’ arrears
49 minutes -
Rebecca Ekpe launches mentorship programme for young journalists and digital creators
50 minutes -
Home Support: How we can use Ghanaians living in the diaspora to form supporter groups for the 2026 World Cup and save millions
57 minutes -
NPP communicator, Senyo Amekplenu seeks audit service expenditure details under RTI
1 hour -
British man charged in Dubai for alleged filming of Iranian missiles
1 hour -
The mirage of president’s special initiatives – Mahama’s “Legacy Projects”, or another monuments of waste?
1 hour
