Tag: Election

  • Millions of Americans to vote with Congress at stake

    Millions of Americans are voting in the midterm elections today, Tuesday, with the balance of power in Congress at stake.

    The entire US House of Representatives, about a third of the Senate and key state governorships are up for grabs.

    President Joe Biden, a Democrat, and ex-President Donald Trump, a Republican, made their closing arguments in competing rallies.

    Mr Biden’s ability to pass laws will be stymied if Republicans take the House, as most projections expect.

    Democrats currently control the White House and – by razor-thin margins – both chambers of Congress.

    The party in power typically sheds an average of two dozen or so seats in the midterms, which fall midway through a president’s four years in office.

    A political thumping for Democrats on Tuesday could embolden murmurs within the party about whether Mr Biden, who turns 80 this month, should run for re-election in 2024.

    He went to Maryland on Monday night to campaign for Wes Moore, who is expected to make history as the third black governor ever elected in the US.

    Wes Moore (centre) would become only the third black governor in the US if electedIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Wes Moore (centre) looks set to become the third black governor ever elected in the US

    “Today we face an inflection point,” Mr Biden told a cheering crowd at a historically black university outside Washington.

    “We know in our bones that our democracy’s at risk and we know that this is your moment to defend it.”

    According to a tally by the BBC’s US partner, CBS News, more than half of Republican midterms candidates have raised doubts about the integrity of the 2020 White House election, echoing Mr Trump’s false claims of widespread fraud.

    While Mr Biden himself is not up for re-election on Tuesday, midterms are often seen as a referendum on a president’s leadership.

    Despite delivering on promises to lower prescription drug prices, expand clean energy and revamp US infrastructure, Mr Biden has seen his popularity suffer following the worst inflation in four decades, record illegal crossings at the US-Mexico border, and voter concerns about crime.

    Mr Trump spent the eve of election day holding a final rally in Ohio alongside Republican Senate candidate JD Vance.

    The former president, who has been teasing a 2024 White House comeback bid, said he would make a “very big announcement” at his Florida estate Mar-a-Lago on 15 November.

    He told the crowd: “If you support the decline and fall of America, then you must, you absolutely must vote for the radical left, crazy people.

    “If you want to stop the destruction of our country, then tomorrow you must vote Republican in a giant red wave.”

    Mr Trump’s party needs to net only five seats to flip the House and a single seat to take over the evenly divided Senate.

    Non-partisan election observers project the Republicans will pick up roughly 15-25 seats in the 435-seat House.

    Supporters of Donald Trump await his arrival for a rally in Vandalia, OhioIMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES
    Image caption, Supporters of Donald Trump await his arrival for Monday’s rally in Vandalia, Ohio

    But the battle for the upper chamber of Congress could go either way, according to most political forecasts, and is expected to come down to hotly fought races in Pennsylvania, Georgia, Nevada and Arizona.

    Should Republicans win the House, they have vowed to shut down the Democratic-led inquiry into last year’s Capitol riot and launch investigations into the Biden administration.

    Kevin McCarthy, who would probably become Republican speaker of the House – placing him second in line to the presidency – has refused to rule out impeachment proceedings.

    Mr Biden’s power to appoint judges or administrative posts for the next two years would be severely curtailed if Republicans win the Senate.

    More than 43.5m early votes have already been cast, according to the US Elections Project.

    But it might be days or weeks before the outcome of the midterms is clear if races are close, as some states allow ballots to be posted on election day, and there could be recounts.

    Source: BBC

  • My re-election was so clean because it is an ‘election of truth’ – Ablekuma South NDC Organiser

    The re-elected Organiser of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) in the Ablekuma South constituency, Alfred Addotey Allotey, has termed the just-ended elections as an ‘election of truth.’

    The party executive, who polled 1013 votes against his contender, Albert Pangbot, who polled 510 votes, said his victory in this election feels so clean although he never underestimated his contender.

    “I have never underestimated my competitor but this victory looks resounding, this victory looks so pure, so clean. My efforts [to] my people have really paid off and I anticipated this. I saw this victory coming and I’ve said to so many people that I knew this victory was coming.

    “Throughout my campaign, I have said to everybody that Ablekuma South has been lured for many years, and these elections that we’re going to run is going to be the election that I term the ‘election of truth,’” Addotey Allotey stated.

    Speaking to GhanaWeb immediately after he was declared winner in the constituency elections on Saturday, October 22, 2022, Alfred Addotey Allotey, popularly known as Alute, emphasised the need for the new crop of executives to continually support the work of their Member of Parliament, Alfred Oko Vanderpuije.

    “We have a Member of Parliament – I just want to be so emphatic, who today stands as one of the best Members of Parliament in Ghana. There are many constituencies surrounding us who are just pleading within their hearts, and they are overjoyed to have Dr. Alfred Oko Vanderpuije as their Member of Parliament.

    “This man is doing a yeoman’s job,” he stressed.

    Watch him speak below:

    Ablekuma South Organiser calls out regional executives working against party interest

    Ablekuma South Organiser calls out regional executives working against party interest.

  • 466 aspirants vying for positions in Bono NDC constituency elections

    A total of 13, 209 delegates are expected to vote to decide the fate of some 466 aspirants in the Bono Regional National Democratic Congress (NDC) Party’s constituency election this weekend.

    In all, that region has 12 constituencies.

    Mr Richard Blay, the Party’s Bono Regional Director of Elections, told the Ghana News Agency in an interview in Sunyani that Banda was the only constituency among the 12 that had all its aspirants going unopposed and therefore, would settle for acclamation on Saturday.

    He said that aside, the Berekum East constituency would hold the election on Sunday, but the rest would have theirs on Saturday.

    Giving the constituency breakdown, Mr Blay explained that in Sunyani East Constituency, 43 aspirants were seeking to be elected with 2,295 delegates expected to vote, whereas in Sunyani West, 1,700 delegates would be voting for 40 aspirants.

    At the Berekum East constituency, 1,204 delegates would be voting for 47 aspirants, whereas Berekum West has 46 candidates with 561 expected delegates.

    The Dormaa West constituency has 39 contenders and 540 delegates, Dormaa East, 36 candidates and 807 delegates and the Dormaa Central, 42 aspirants but 1,247 delegates.

    The Jaman North and Jaman South constituencies have 41 and 47 aspirants, with 1,014 and 1,211 expected delegates, respectively.

    The Wenchi constituency has 50 aspirants and 1,256 delegates with the Tain constituency having 35 aspirants and 1,372 delegates.

    Mr Blay expressed satisfaction with the election process in all the 12 constituencies, saying everything was on course for a successful, free, and fair election, indicating security on the day was well-assured for the safety of everyone.

    The 466 candidates are contesting Chairman, Vice- Chairman, Secretary, Deputy Secretary, Organiser, Deputy Organiser, Treasurer, Deputy Treasurer, Communication Officer, and Deputy Communication Officer positions.

    The other positions are Women Organiser, Deputy Women Organiser, Youth Organiser, Deputy Youth Organiser, One Youth Representative, Zongo Caucus Coordinator and eight other Executive members.

  • Mahama explains why NDC could not submit pink sheets in the 2020 election petition

    For the first time, former President John Dramani Mahama has opened up about why he and the National Democratic Congress (NDC) could not provide the needed evidence to make their case in the 2020 election petition.

    On December 30, 2022, the former president dragged the Electoral Commission led by Jean Mensa (1st Respondent) and Akufo-Addo (2nd Respondent) to the apex court over the 2020 presidential elections on an allegation that the results announced by the EC were not the accurate results.

    The petition details “serious violations of the 1992 Constitution by the Electoral Commission and its Chairperson and Returning Officer for the Presidential Election, Mrs. Jean Adukwei Mensa in the conduct of their constitutional and legal responsibility.”

    The petitioner sought, among others, a declaration from the Supreme Court to the effect that “the purported declaration of the results of the 2020 Presidential Election on December 9 2020, is unconstitutional, null and void and of no effect whatsoever.”

    But the seven-member panel of the Supreme Court on March 4, 2021, held that the petition filed by former President John Dramani Mahama was unmeritorious and unanimously dismissed all other applications moved by the petitioner, including two reviews.

    Speaking in a VOA interview monitored by GhanaWeb, John Dramani Mahama intimated that NDC could not make its case because the pink sheets used by the EC to record the election results did not make room for the people to be verified before they could vote.

    “In the last elections, a lot of things went wrong. On the pink sheets that we record the results, they did not make allowance for the number of people biometrically registered.

    “And that is why when we went to court, and they said, why don’t you bring your pink sheet? It would have been useless because you bring the pink sheet, and there is no recording of the number of people verified.

    “It is only when you have that recording which must match up with the number of ballots in the box (that you can make a case). And so, if the Electoral Commission gives you a form that does not make provision for the people verified then what is the need for us to put our figures in the verification machine,” he said.

    The former president further stated that most of the challenges in the 2020 elections have still not been resolved.

    He added that the NDC has taken a cue from what happened in the 2020 election and has decided to go into the next election with its “own referrer”.

     

  • In the midst of a persistent political turmoil, Lesotho elects a new parliament

    Despite the deadlock in parliament, the election has been held, and observers believe this will harm the incumbent party.

    Lesotho citizens have voted in a parliamentary election that political analysts said could see the ruling party lose power after years of political instability that the Southern African mountain kingdom’s legislators have failed to resolve.

    Friday’s election has gone ahead despite a deadlock in parliament on a gamut of constitutional reforms that were meant to be enacted ahead of the vote to bring order to Lesotho’s fractious politics.

    The All Basotho Convention (ABC) has run the country of 2.14 million people since 2017, but divisions within the party have seen two prime ministers installed over five years.

    Defections, meanwhile, have left the party vulnerable to its opposition rivals, the Democratic Congress (DC) and the new Revolution for Prosperity (RFP), which is led by businessman Sam Matekane.

    “These elections will be highly contested and by the look of things, the DC and RFP will be neck and neck,” said Lesotho political analyst Lefu Thaela, who saw the ABC trailing in third place.

    Speaking to Reuters before polls opened, Thaela said the DC was likely to get the most votes but if it did not win an outright majority, the outgoing ABC could emerge as the kingmaker.

    Some voters who turned up early at the polling stations said they hoped to bring a change of government.

    “Truth be told, no government has ever fulfilled my aspirations and I am very disappointed,” said Semoko Monare, who has been voting since 1993.

    Surrounded on all sides by South Africa’s mountains, Lesotho’s high-altitude springs provide vital freshwater to its parched neighbour, supplying its commercial hub, Johannesburg.

    In 2020, ABC leader Thomas Thabane stepped down as prime minister after being charged with the murder of his ex-wife. He denied any wrongdoing, and the charges were later dropped.

    His successor, Moeketsi Majoro, declared a state of emergency in August after politicians failed to pass constitutional reforms to amend everything from the role of political parties and rules on floor-crossing in parliament to the appointment of senior officials and the prime minister’s role.

    The reforms were supposed to make Lesotho less prone to political logjams but got stuck in one themselves.

    Last month, Lesotho’s highest court ruled the state of emergency unconstitutional. The ABC has selected another leader, former health minister Nkaku Kabi, to contest its ticket.

     

  • Saying I will put my presidency on the line against galamsey was not out of recklessness – Akufo-Addo

    President Akufo-Addo has emphasised that he spoke the absolute truth when he announced his commitment to fighting illegal mining in Ghana.

    According to the president, the evidence of truth in his statement was apparent when his government’s fight against galamsey cost himself and the New Patriotic Party during his quest for re-election in 2020.

    “Since I took office on January 7th, 2017, nearly six years ago, I have made it a central feature of my presidency to lead in the fight to rid our country of this menace, which we all now call galamsey. Indeed, it was an important aspect of my inaugural address that day. It has not been easy; it has not been popular and we have not gotten the immediate results that I was looking for.

    “Indeed, in the last election of 2020, my stance on the issue cost my party and I significant losses in the mining communities. It turned out that my statement that I was putting my presidency on the line in the fight against galamsey was neither bumbazed nor reckless. It was the simple truth,” the president said when he met with members of the National House of Chiefs in Kumasi on Wednesday, October 5, 2022.

    The meeting with the traditional leaders was convened at the request of the president to discuss ways to fight illegal mining, which has escalated in magnitude over the past years.

    This is despite the promise made by the president at his inauguration in 2017 and the various campaigns launched by his government over the period.

    The growing impact of galamsey is proving a threat to several water and forest bodies across the country.

    This has led to calls on the government to adopt more radical efforts in the galamsey fight.

  • Chad extends transition for elections, agrees for Deby to stay

    Officials in Chad have extended the transition period towards democratic elections and say they will keep Mahamat Idriss Deby Itno on as head of state in the interim.

    Delegates also agreed for the military leader to be eligible to run for the presidency when elections are held.

    The decisions were made by a national reconciliation dialogue forum.

    In announcing the move Ahmat Barchire, Rapporteur of the National Sovereign Inclusive Dialogue (DNIS) said: “On the transition, the commission noted that there was a broad consensus to set it at a maximum of 24 months.”

    “The second point concerns ineligibility or eligibility. A consensus was reached that any Chadian who fulfils the conditions set by the law should be eligible to vote and be elected.”

    The national reconciliation dialogue forum has been boycotted by most opposition members, two out of three key armed rebel groups and civil society organisations.

    These decisions will face “resistance from political parties, civil society and the African Union,” said Chadian political scientist Evariste Ngarlem.

    “Neither the European Union nor the United States would accept Deby’s eligibility to run or the extended transition period,” he added.

    “These partners will take sanctions against Chad and the Transitional Military Council’s back will be up against a wall.”

    Chad, one of the world’s poorest countries, has endured repeated uprisings and unrest since gaining independence from France in 1960.

    Source: Africanews

  • Angolan election draws low voter turnout as ruling party on course to win

    Fewer than half of Angola‘s registered voters cast ballots in this week’s election that looks set to extend the MPLA’s almost five decades in power, electoral commission data showed on Friday.

    Despite the MPLA’s expected success, Wednesday’s vote was Angola’s most closely fought yet with unprecedented gains for the opposition, who have complained about the counting process.

    With more than 97% of the vote counted, the election commission said on Thursday the formerly Marxist People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola, or MPLA, was ahead with a 51% majority and its longtime opponent, the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola, or UNITA, had 44.5%.

    If that breakdown holds, MPLA President Joao Lourenço will secure a second five-year term, extending his party’s uninterrupted rule since independence from Portugal in 1975.

    But UNITA, for the first time, will have deprived the MPLA of the two-thirds majority needed to pass major reforms and the ruling party will instead need the backing of other lawmakers.

    Election data released on Friday also showed that turnout was just 45.65% of eligible voters.

    UNITA has challenged provisional results, saying its initial count of 40% of polling stations showed it only a whisker behind the MPLA, saying it was a small enough margin for it to overhaul the MPLA once all ballots in the capital Luanda were counted..

    UNITA posted an image of its leader, Costa Junior on its official Instagram account with the caption: “The President”.

    The ruling party has not yet commented on the results, but it posted a video of Lourenço thanking Angolans on social media.

    Analysts fear any dispute could ignite violence among a poor and frustrated youth who voted for Junior. The MPLA and UNITA, formerly both anti-colonial guerrilla groups, were on opposing sides of an on-off civil war that lasted 27 years from 1975.

    As she watched the news on her phone, 47-year-old Antonia Neto, who works at a coffee shop at Luanda airport, said she was not happy with the results but said there was a glimpse of hope.

    “There is a lot of discontentment,” she said. “Maybe things will be better in the next election.”

    The MPLA’s Lourenço, 68, has pledged to extend reforms in his second term, including privatising poorly-run state assets. But many Angolans still live in poverty despite his promises of a fairer distribution of wealth in Africa’s second biggest oil producer.

    Source: Reuters

  • Brazil: Bolsonaro, Lula trade blows ahead of election

    Bolsonaro once again criticized the country’s electoral system without evidence, while Lula called the far-right president “a cheap copy of Trump

    Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and his main rival, former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, traded blows on Monday ahead of the upcoming presidential election in October.

    Although they didn’t debate face-to-face, the two politicians each gave landmark interviews where Bolsonaro’s unfounded claims of electoral fraud were a key point of contention.

    Bolsonaro continues to sow doubt

    During a 40-minute interview on Journal Nacional, an evening news program that has the highest ratings in the country, Bolsonaro once again made claims about electoral fraud in Brazil. He did not provide any evidence.

    Bolsonaro, a former army captain, also said he believes the military should have a role in deciding the transparency of the vote.

    “The results of the vote will be respected, as long as the election is clean and transparent,” he said.

    As the president’s speech went to air on Monday night, residents in Brazil’s largest cities could be heard banging their pots and pans outside their windows, shouting “out with Bolsonaro.”

    Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro and his main rival, former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, traded blows on Monday ahead of the upcoming presidential election in October.

    Although they didn’t debate face-to-face, the two politicians each gave landmark interviews where Bolsonaro’s unfounded claims of electoral fraud were a key point of contention.

    Bolsonaro continues to sow doubt

    During a 40-minute interview on Journal Nacional, an evening news program that has the highest ratings in the country, Bolsonaro once again made claims about electoral fraud in Brazil. He did not provide any evidence.

    Bolsonaro, a former army captain, also said he believes the military should have a role in deciding the transparency of the vote.

    “The results of the vote will be respected, as long as the election is clean and transparent,” he said.

    As the president’s speech went to air on Monday night, residents in Brazil’s largest cities could be heard banging their pots and pans outside their windows, shouting “out with Bolsonaro.”

    Source; DW

  • Kenya’s Odinga mounts court challenge to presidential poll result

    Kenya‘s defeated presidential candidate Raila Odinga filed a petition to the country’s top court Monday, challenging the outcome of the August 9 election in what he called a fight for “democracy and good governance”.

    Odinga, a veteran opposition leader who ran with the backing of President Uhuru Kenyatta and the ruling party, has rejected the outcome of the poll that delivered victory to his rival William Ruto, branding it a “travesty”.

    The 77-year-old politician lost his fifth bid for the presidency by a narrow margin of around 230,000 votes — less than two percentage points.

    Hundreds of supporters cheered as dozens of boxes of evidence were unloaded from a truck outside the Supreme Court.

    “We have enough evidence that it is us who won the election. We didn’t have an election we can be proud of,” Odinga told a press conference after filing the case.

    The outcome of the poll represented a “continuing struggle pitting the forces for democracy and good governance against the corruption cartels that… will stop at nothing to take control of government,” he said, without giving specific details.

    “The action we have taken… affirms our deep belief in constitutionalism, the rule of law and a peaceful resolution of disputes.”

    Although polling day passed off peacefully, the announcement of the results a week ago sparked angry protests in some Odinga strongholds and there are fears a drawn-out dispute may lead to violence in a country with a history of post-poll unrest.

    Since 2002, no presidential election in Kenya has gone uncontested, with this year’s outcome also causing a rift within the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC) which oversaw the poll.

    According to a copy of the 72-page petition, Odinga’s team alleges that IEBC chairman Wafula Chebukati failed to tally around 140,000 votes.

    As a result, Ruto “did not meet the constitutional threshold of 50% plus 1 of the valid votes cast” — a requirement for him to be declared the winner.

    Judges now have 14 days to issue a ruling. If they order an annulment, a new vote must be held within 60 days.

    – ‘We want justice’ –

    Odinga supporters began gathering outside the court hours before his arrival, blowing whistles and waving placards reading “Electoral Justice Now!” and “We want justice now”.

    “Odinga must win so that we get the 6,000 shillings ($50) promised in his manifesto,” said one man, wearing a crown made with plants who was referring to a monthly cash handout for vulnerable households.

    Another man — armed with a Bible and wearing huge green glasses — knelt down in prayer as police guarded the court premises.

    A court clerk said the tribunal had also received another eight petitions over the results filed by voters, politicians and non-profit organisations.

    The IEBC was under heavy pressure to deliver a clean vote after facing sharp criticism over its handling of the August 2017 election, which was also challenged by Odinga.

    The court annulled that election in a first for Africa and ordered a re-run which was boycotted by Odinga. Dozens of people died during a police crackdown on protests.

    In a shock development shortly before the results of this year’s poll were announced, four of the IEBC’s seven commissioners accused chairman Chebukati of running an “opaque” operation and later said the numbers did not add up.

    Chebukati dismissed the claims, insisting he had carried out his duties according to the law of the land despite “intimidation and harassment”.

    – Divided opinion –

    Legal experts are divided on whether Chebukati needed the commissioners’ backing to announce the results, with constitutional lawyer Charles Kanjama said there was “some ambiguity” surrounding the issue.

    Odinga has previously said he was cheated of victory in the 2007, 2013 and 2017 elections, and the poll’s aftermath is being keenly watched as a test of democratic maturity in the East African powerhouse.

    On the campaign trail, both frontrunners pledged to resolve any disputes in court rather than on the streets.

    Since the results were declared, Odinga has commended his supporters for “remaining calm” while Ruto has taken a conciliatory tone and promised to “work with all leaders”.

    Kenya’s worst electoral violence occurred after the 2007 vote, when more than 1,100 people died in politically motivated clashes involving rival tribes.

    If the Supreme Court upholds the results, Ruto will become Kenya’s fifth president since independence from Britain in 1963, taking the reins of a country battling inflation, high unemployment and a crippling drought.

    Source: Africa News

  • Unequal and divided, Angola braces for tense election

    Angolans head to the polls next week in what is likely to be a tense standoff between a ruling party in power for nearly five decades and an opposition with growing appeal to a frustrated, impoverished youth.

    The MPLA, led by João Lourenço since 2017, has governed Africa’s second-biggest oil producer since independence from Portugal in 1975. But longtime opposition party UNITA is stronger than ever, as anger grows at government failures to convert vast oil wealth into better living conditions for all.

    Angola, one of the world’s most unequal nations, will on Aug. 24 elect a new president and lawmakers in its fifth multi-party election since the first in 1992.

    Half of Angolans live in poverty and more than half of those under 25 are unemployed, facts which UNITA hopes to capitalize on in promising a change of regime. Half of voters are under 35.

    An Afro barometer survey in May showed Angolans favoring UNITA, led by the charismatic Adalberto Costa Júnior, had increased to 22% from 13% in 2019, still seven points behind the MPLA. Nearly half of voters were undecided.

    “Without a doubt, this election is the tensest since 1992,” said Oxford University researcher Ricardo Soares de Oliveira. “There’s a huge amount of volatility and unpredictability – and the party in power has a lot of fear.”

    Handpicked by his predecessor José Eduardo dos Santos when he stepped down in 2017 after ruling Angola for 38 years, Lourenço pledged to fight corruption and boost the economy at a time of crisis due to the 2014 oil price crash.

    He investigated corruption during the dos Santos era, targeting the former leader’s children in seeking to recover billions of dollars of siphoned-off revenue, a moved aimed at trying to “gain some popular legitimacy,” said Justin Pearce, senior lecturer in history at South Africa’s Stellenbosch University.

    Lourenço also signed a deal with the IMF and improved ties with the West to reposition Angola as a trustworthy investment destination, but was confronted with COVID-19 and a fall in oil prices, then the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    “Issues that affect people very directly … haven’t been solved,” Jon Schubert, an anthropology professor at the University of Basel. “The cost of living is very high and salaries are worth a third of what they were six years ago.”

    Angola emerged from a 27-year civil war between the MPLA and UNITA in 2002, but Soares de Oliveira said the youth had little concern for this history, and worried more about economic ills.

    That raises the risk of violent protest, if they feel their voices were not heard. A report by the Institute for Security Studies said that if an MPLA win is perceived as fraudulent, unrest could follow.

    Source: Reuters

  • CPP to hold local level elections

    The Convention People’s Party (CPP) will hold its polling station, electoral area and constituency elections from June to July 2022 to position the party ahead of the 2024 general election.

    The party has also slated the months of August, October and December 31, 2022, for the elections of its regional, national officers and flag bearer of the party respectively.

    The timetable for the local elections of the party was made known by the Central Committee of the party at a press conference held at its headquarters in Accra last Monday.

    The party could not give the time for which nominations for the elections would be opened and the cost of the nomination forms but said it would be made known in due course.

    Membership drive

    The National Chairperson of the CPP, Nana Frimpomaa Sarpong-Kumankumah, who addressed the press conference also announced that the party had began its membership drive across the country to woo the youth into its fold to rejuvenate the party to enable it to capture political power in the 2024 general election.

    In line with that the party said it was going to come out with electronic membership forms to enable all who were interested in joining the party to have access to the forms wherever they were.

    She, therefore, called on the Ghanaian youth to take over their country by vying for positions in the CPP.

    “The membership drive is aimed at bringing every Ghanaian on board to own and manage the party from the polling station, constituency, regional and national levels,” she stated.

    She said the party had also opened its offices across the country for the registration of new members to woo the youth into the party with a membership form sold at GH¢5 to make everyone interested in charting a new course for the country and be part of the governance system of the country.

    Nana Sarpong-Kumankumah, therefore called on Ghanaians, especially the youth to join the ranks of the party to help restore Ghana to its past glory.

    She noted that it was the CPP that gave birth to the nation Ghana and laid a solid foundation for its socio-economic transformation until the 1966 coup that truncated the forward march of the country.

    She said the reorganisation was, therefore, to let Ghanaians join the party to effect the kind of changes they wanted to see in the country per the constitution of the party.

    Nana Sarpong-Kumankumah said the 2024 general election was for the CPP and the party was poised through its reorganisation to capture political power to bring about the ” true changes” that Ghanaians wanted to see.

    Policies

    The CPP national chairperson said the party when voted into government would put in place comprehensive policies and programmes that would turn the economic fortunes of the country around and empower the youth to earn decent incomes and to live dignifying lives.

    ” We would rule Ghana based on the principles and vision of our founder, Dr Kwame Nkrumah, who is the first President of this country who said the black man and woman was capable of running his or her own affairs”, she stated.

    The 2020 running mate of the party, Prof. Emmanuel Yaovi Bobobee, who also spoke to the media, said the CPP was the only party that did not have any region or constituency as its stronghold but was open to all Ghanaians no matter their social, economic, religious and ethnic backgrounds.

    Source: graphic.com.gh

  • Massive ammunitions found in the cars of party thugs at Ajumako constituency

    As the election is fast approaching the security agencies are wild and watching every corner of the country to ensure absolute calmness during the election.

    The security officials at Ajumako have impounded massive ammunition in two vehicles belonging to a party thugs in Ajumako constituency. One of the vehicles the ammunitions were found inside was a silver Luxus SUV and the other was a pick up

    The security officials conducted a swoop on the vehicles said to belong to both NPP and NDC in the the constituency in the ongoing voter registration exercise after complaint of intimation

    The police after their search found several guns and ammunition in the two vehicles and arrested the occupants and seized the guns and ammunition

    The suspects are being held up temporarily at Ajumako police station for further investigations into the source of the ammunitions

    The security officials promised to do anything to bring out anyone behind the guns to book

    Source: opera.com
  • Protesters padlock offices of Malawi election body

    Protesters in Malawi have padlocked the offices of the electoral commission in an effort to force its head to quit after the Constitutional Court annulled last year’s presidential election.

    Hundreds of demonstrators marched 5km (3.1 miles) to the commission’s offices in the commercial capital, Blantyre, and locked its entrance gates with large, rusty chains.

    Thousands of people did the same in the capital, Lilongwe, handing over the padlock’s key to an army officer.

    The court found serious irregularities in the poll, including the use of correction fluid on tally sheets.

    The head of the electoral commission insists there was no wrongdoing.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Para-powerlifting: Uboh-Idris silent on resignation

    Queen Uboh-Idris has failed to give reasons for her resignation as the President, Nigerian Para-Powerlifting Federation.

    Speaking with our correspondent on Sunday, Uboh-Idris, who announced her resignation at the end of the 2020 Para-Powerlifting World championship, which took place in Abuja, said she would address the press on Monday (today).

    “I will be addressing the press tomorrow (Monday) by 4pm to state my reason, for now, I cannot say anything,” she told The PUNCH.

    The NPPF had been enmeshed in crisis, with athletes staging a protest in Lagos last month over the exclusion of junior lifters from the competition.

    The Minister of Youth and Sport Development, Sunday Dare, waded into the crisis, calling all warring factions to remain calms, as all issues would be resolved.

    Uboh-Idris had also in an interview on Channels TV, accused of wanting her to share funds raked from sponsors.

    Source: punchng.com

  • Court in Malawi orders new vote after May 2019 result annulled

    Malawi’s constitutional court has annulled last year’s controversial election, which saw President Peter Mutharika re-elected.

    The judge found there had been widespread irregularities in the May 21 vote.

    This is the first election to be legally challenged since Malawi’s independence. A new vote will take place within 151 days.

    There have been regular anti-government protests since the election.

    Source: bbc