
Ms Gloria Akuffo, a member of the incoming
government’s transition team responsible for legal affairs, says the Mahama-led
government presided over many wrongs, posing a daunting task for the NPP
government to surmount.Many Ghanaians reposed high confidence in the
Akufo-Addo-led government to deliver on their many promises. But assessing the
performance of the outgoing government, Ms. Akuffo says a lot of things need to
be done if the NPP would achieve its promises to Ghanaians.
‘The battle
is the Lord’s’ was the catchphrase of the New Patriotic Party during years of
campaigning which paid off eventually on December 9 when the party’s
presidential candidate was declared winner of the December 7 general
elections.
Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo won the presidential election with
5,716,026 representing 53.85% of the total votes cast, beating off stiff
competition from the incumbent president, John Mahama who had 4, 713,277
representing 44.40 percent.
At a thanksgiving service at the Accra Sports
Stadium by the NPP on Sunday, Ms Gloria Akuffo told TV3’s Nana Aduah, “the
battle did not end at the end of the elections; indeed the battle has just
began”.
The transition team began its work on Wednesday December 14 prior
to the handing over of power on January 7, 2017, but Ms. Akuffo analysed, “there
are a lot of things to be done, too many things have gone wrong.”
Though
she did not mention exactly things that have gone wrong, this is what she said
of the work ahead: “In my life I have realized renovation is more difficult than
to start from the beginning. Indeed there is a lot more to be
done”.
Prof. Mike Ocquaye, who has been tipped as the next Speaker of
Parliament, early on told TV3 the NPP is “humbled by the fact that there is work
ahead”.
Nonetheless, he said, the party has more people capable of
surmounting whatever challenge that is ahead of them.
Meanwhile, Dean of
Graduate Studies and Research at the Institute of Local Government Studies
(ILGS), Dr. Eric Oduro Osae has charged ministers who would be appointed to
listen to the chief directors in their respective ministries who have the
technical expertise, which he identified as the weak point of the outoing
administration.
|
|
|
|
|