Audio By Carbonatix
The call to retain Hon. Alexander Afenyo-Markin as Minority Leader in the name of unity is emotionally appealing but politically and administratively flawed. Unity in politics is not declared; it is demonstrated through conduct, loyalty, and trust, especially after a decisive internal contest.
The central issue is not personality, forgiveness, or parliamentary competence in isolation. It is trust.
Hon. Afenyo-Markin worked actively against the election of the party’s duly elected presidential candidate, Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia. This is not conjecture; it is evidenced electorally. In Afenyo-Markin’s own constituency, Dr. Bawumia reportedly polled about 10 percent of the votes cast. In political terms, this is not neutrality, restraint, or silent dissent. It is outright rejection.
Best practice across democratic systems is clear. You cannot lead the parliamentary machinery of a party whose presidential candidate you demonstrably opposed. Doing so creates a leadership contradiction at the very top of the opposition’s command structure.
The Minority Leader is not merely a parliamentary tactician. He is the chief political mobiliser in Parliament, a key liaison between the flagbearer and MPs, and a strategic gatekeeper of information, timing, and resistance. Placing someone in this role who did not believe in the candidate’s leadership weakens coordination, blurs messaging, and creates room for quiet sabotage, intentional or otherwise.
Politics runs on alignment. Where alignment is absent, effectiveness collapses.
Post-primary visits, statements of support, and public pledges, while welcome, do not erase prior political action. Forgiveness is a moral virtue; leadership appointments are strategic decisions. In serious political organisations, forgiveness does not automatically translate into retention of sensitive authority, and reconciliation does not mean maintaining people in positions of maximum leverage.
Dr. Bawumia may be forgiving. The party, however, must be institutionally prudent.
The argument that Afenyo-Markin should stay to preserve institutional memory ignores a more dangerous reality. A Minority Leader who cannot be fully trusted becomes a liability in high-stakes negotiations, bipartisan dealings, and confidential strategy. In Ghana’s political context, where inducements, cross-carpeting, and soft collaboration with ruling governments are not unheard of, trust is not optional.
Even the perception that the Minority Leader may not be fully loyal to the flagbearer weakens caucus discipline, external confidence, and internal morale. Politics punishes ambiguity at the top.
True unity is achieved when leadership roles reflect the outcome of democratic contests, key positions are held by individuals whose loyalty is beyond question, and the parliamentary front speaks with one voice, one strategy, and one command. Retaining Afenyo-Markin signals the opposite, that open opposition to the party’s chosen leader carries no organisational consequence.
That is not unity. That is institutional confusion.
The question is not whether Afenyo-Markin is intelligent, experienced, or capable. The question is simple. Can the parliamentary leader of the NPP be someone who clearly did not want the party’s presidential candidate to win?
In any serious political organisation, the answer is no.
For trust, coherence, administrative effectiveness, and the protection of the party’s electoral future, Hon. Alexander Afenyo-Markin must step aside or be replaced. Not as punishment, but as a necessary act of political realism.
Unity without trust is theatre.
And theatre does not win elections.
Latest Stories
-
‘Don’t try to make James Bond woke’ – Idris Elba
3 minutes -
JICA and Noguchi enhance lab skills of healthcare professionals in Africa to combat infectious diseases
7 minutes -
Toronto Investment Forum to spotlight Ghana’s 24-Hour Economy push
8 minutes -
The Vanishing Crisis: Inside the Equity Savings and Loans crisis
13 minutes -
New Haven Garments eyes sub-Saharan expansion with Cinnamon brand
13 minutes -
Mahama signs three MoUs with Belarus
22 minutes -
Iran’s strike on Israel suggests the regime’s sense of resilience is growing
26 minutes -
Auntie Vida Tibo Ayertey
27 minutes -
Senior member of Kinahan crime group sentenced to 24 years in prison
27 minutes -
Mahama bans ministers and state CEOs from accepting private awards without presidential clearance
30 minutes -
Article 108: Mahama’s legal shield against Anti-LGBTQ Bill?
52 minutes -
‘Behind The Lens with Queen Liz’ explores Christian and Islamic perspectives on Jesus and Isa
55 minutes -
2026 FIFA World Cup: Ghana is missing a golden opportunity to sell its tourism, arts, culture to the world
1 hour -
Peki Girls pedal towards success through Vida Cycling initiative
1 hour -
Energy Minister backs expansion of Sentuo Refinery
1 hour