Audio By Carbonatix
The Supreme Court has, by a 4–1 majority, overturned the High Court's ruling annulling the Kpandai parliamentary election won by the New Patriotic Party (NPP)'s Matthew Nyindam.
Justice Gabriel Scott Pwamang, who presided over the panel, dissented.
The decision follows an application filed by Mr Nyindam seeking to invoke the Supreme Court’s supervisory jurisdiction to set aside the High Court’s ruling on the grounds of jurisdictional error.
The court upheld his application, effectively restoring his election as Member of Parliament.
The central issue before the Supreme Court was the date on which the Electoral Commission (EC) gazetted the results of the 2024 parliamentary election for the Kpandai constituency.
Under Ghana’s electoral laws, an election petition must be filed within 21 days of the gazette notification of results. A petition filed outside the 21-day period will not give the court jurisdiction to hear the case.
Mr Nyindam’s case was that the EC gazetted the results on 24th December 2024. Therefore, any petition filed outside of the 21-day period counting from this date would be deemed to be incompetent.
He further argued that the petitioner brought his case before the Tamale High Court outside of this window, and the court, therefore, lacks jurisdiction to entertain the petition.
The National Democratic Congress (NDC), however, maintained that the 2024 elections presented a special situation, as the Electoral Commission issued two gazette notices, one on 24th December 2024 and another on 6th January 2025.
According to the NDC, the latter gazette superseded the earlier one, and the operative date for calculating time should, therefore, be 6th January 2025.
They argued that the petition was properly filed within time and that the High Court acted lawfully.
However, it would seem that the NDC's argument did not find favour with the majority of the Supreme Court justices whoheard Matthew Nyidam's application.
The panel that determined the matter was made up of Justices Gabriel Scott Pwamang, Amadu-Omoro Tanko, Yonny Kulendi, Samuel Kwame Adibu Asiedu, and Henry Kwoffie.
The full reasoned judgment of the court is to be ready on 6th February, 2026.
Latest Stories
-
ICE detention does not automatically lead to deportation – Immigration lawyer, Angela Moore
2 minutes -
Photos: Chief Justice pays courtesy call on IGP
5 minutes -
‘You will serve Ghana one day’ — Kpandai MP praises Bawumia after supreme court victory
14 minutes -
Budget constraints force focus on Big Push trunk roads – Agbodza
20 minutes -
U.S. immigration system operates on law, not protests – Angela Moore
26 minutes -
Saglemi affordable housing joint venture officially finalized, execution expected soon
29 minutes -
NDC wanted to change the will of Kpandai – Mathew Nyindam
32 minutes -
NDC urged to stay calm after Supreme Court restores NPP’s Nyindam as Kpandai MP
37 minutes -
44% of Ghana’s validated roads in good condition as 2025 ends – Roads Minister
44 minutes -
NPP’s Matthew Nyindam thanks God and supporters following Supreme Court restoration
50 minutes -
Gov’t to seize and auction excess goods from overloaded vehicles under new road policy – Agbodza
1 hour -
Decade-old Krofrom Market project set for completion by year-end 2026
1 hour -
Supreme Court declines AG’s bid to review ruling on Adu-Boahene case
1 hour -
Laryea Kingston eyes ‘big first-team job’ in five years
1 hour -
Supreme Court ruling on Kpandai seat vindicates legal process – Gary Nimako
1 hour
