Opinions of Monday, 25 March 2024

Columnist: Kwaku Badu

Let NDC move heaven and earth, Mahama can never be president again - Why?

John Dramani Mahama John Dramani Mahama

We have, unfortunately, been witnessing unbridled reactive emotional responses from the likes of former President John Dramani Mahama and his teeming supporters ever since the NDC lost the 2016 and 2020 general elections to the NPP.

Given the bizarre circumstances, we cannot deny or hide the fact that former President Mahama and the vast majority of the brassbound NDC loyalists have been going through a process analogous to Dr. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross’s stages of grief.

Upon carefully considered reflection, I would like to submit that the good people of Ghana made a terrible mistake by voting the NPP administration out in the 2008 general elections, as Ghana, so to speak, was heading in the right direction following the eight years of prudent governance by Ex-President Kufuor and his equally dynamic team.

The good people of Ghana, unfortunately, fell for the NDC’s well-executed political strategy and voted out the NPP administration in 2008, despite the NPP government’s pragmatic programmes and policies, which put the country in a highly favourable economic position.

Back then, the New Patriotic Party (NPP) communicators, puzzlingly, displayed sheer complacency and disappointingly failed to counter the NDC’s contemptible
propaganda.

In retrospect, former President Kufuor passed on the baton to the late President Mills on January 7, 2009, following his victory in the December 2008 general elections. The late President Mills was extremely fortunate to have inherited a very good economic foundation laid by the forward-thinking President Kufuor and his equally hardworking team.

For instance, three years after former President Kufuor’s NPP government discovered oil in commercial quantities, the late President Mills had the joyous task of turning on the valve at an offshore platform in December 2010 to pump the first commercial oil.

And, lo and behold, Ghana joined the petroleum-exporting countries. Believe it or not, Ghana started to export crude oil, which boosted economic growth.
The economy grew auspiciously from around 8.4 percent to around 14 percent by
2011, and Ghana thus reached lower middle-income status.

“Ghana has come a long way and is the world's fastest-growing economy today.

“Ghana's economy is growing at a blistering 20.15 percent, says Economy Watch.

“Blessed with rich reserves of natural resources, Ghana has suddenly turned around and is now speeding along the growth path.

“Ghana is oil-rich, has large gold and diamond deposits, and has a booming tourism industry” (Economy Watch 2010).

And who says that the favourable economic foundation laid by former President
Kufuor and his team were not the main contributory factor in Ghana’s economic
upsurge?

Unfortunately, things started to fall apart (apologies to the indefatigable Chinua Achebe). It went from bad to worse following President Mills' sudden and mysterious death in July 2012.

The then vice president, Mahama (the automatic successor to the presidency), and his government officials had a field day leading up to the 2012 general elections. They went ‘haywire’ in their desperation to cling on to power. Thus, they broke all conventions. Many government departments spent over and above their allocated budgets, which brought about a double budget deficit amid huge and unmanageable
debt stock.

With all due respect and no attached condescension whatsoever, former President Mahama had an ample opportunity to show discerning Ghanaians his ability to steer the nation in the right direction but woefully failed to do so. So, what can he do for the presidency next time around?

Perhaps more than anything else, Ex-President Mahama and his loyalists are still holding on to the elusive belief that Ghanaians suffer from memory loss and therefore cannot recollect the revoltingly ugly events which took place under their watch.

Dearest reader, if that were not the case, what would then drive a president who wilfully brought the country to its knees through catastrophic decision-making to seek a return?

After all, wasn’t the same former President Mahama who once claimed that Ghanaians have short memories?

Yes, he boldly referred to Ghanaian people as a bunch of amnesia sufferers (emphasis mine).

But contrary to former President Mahama’s seemingly isolated view, discerning Ghanaians have miraculously overcome their hitherto beguiling, albeit harmful, memory loss, if the results of the 2016 and 2020 elections were anything to go by.

Given the unpardonable economic meltdown under his watch, Ex-President Mahama should do the right thing by eating humble pie and apologise to the good people of Ghana for wilfully messing up the once favourable economy.

If former President Mahama cannot see the need to beg discerning Ghanaians for forgiveness for abysmally dragging the 14% economic growth in 2011 to a disappointing 3.4% by December 2016, then what right does he have to come and stand in front of the good people of Ghana to solicit for their votes in 2024?

So does former President Mahama really believe that he owes no one apology for needlessly raising Ghana’s debt from GH9.5 billion in 2009 to an incredible GH122.4 billion by December 2016 with little to show for it?

Indeed, the good people of Ghana cannot so soon forget and forgive former President Mahama for the business crippling dumsor in the last five years of the erstwhile National Democratic Congress administration.

Former President Mahama should stop taking Ghanaians for granted and ask for forgiveness for terribly collapsing the Agricultural sector by reducing growth from 7.4% in 2012 to a miserable 2.5% in December 2016.

If former President Mahama really wants to lead the country again, then he should explain and render an unqualified apology to the good people of Ghana for shrinking Ghana’s GDP from GH47 billion in 2011 to GH40 billion by December 2016.

And who says that discerning Ghanaians have forgotten and forgiven former President Mahama for recklessly giving out large portions of Ghana’s scarce resources to parasitic creatures, who, in actual fact, contributed nothing meaningful towards nation-building?

Ex-President Mahama should, as a matter of urgency, apologise to discerning Ghanaians for unjustifiably giving apologists like Madam Akua Donkor of the Ghana Freedom Party (GFP) two four-wheel-drive cars and a luxury bungalow (estimated to cost a staggering $470,000) for no work done.

Dearest reader, tell me, why must Ex-President Mahama think he does not owe the good people of Ghana any apology for giving away 58% of Ghana’s bauxite to his sibling Ibrahim Mahama and his partners on December 29, 2016, just a little over one week before exiting power?

If anything at all, former President Mahama should do the honest thing by apologising on behalf of his brother Ibrahim Mahama for allegedly evading import taxes to the tune of GH12 million during his tenure in office.

What is more, former President Mahama should acknowledge the concerns of Ghanaians over the purported GH800 million dubious judgment debt payments, including the GH51.2 million to Woyome, $30 million to Waterville, and $325,000 to Isofoton, which resulted in a drastic reduction of capital expenditure, and as a consequence, most contractors were not paid by the erstwhile NDC administration.

So is former President Mahama not concerned about the misappropriation of the $175 million loan facility secured in 2012, which was meant to provide seven district hospitals, and the NDC hierarchy misapplied on the blind side of Ghanaians?

To be quite honest, some of us would be extremely surprised if ex-President Mahama failed to beg Ghanaians for forgiveness before the 2024 general elections for surreptitiously diverting $6 million of a government loan facility of $175 million meant to provide seven district hospitals into researching the then-governing NDC party’s chances of winning the 2016 general elections. How pathetic?

Former President Mahama should not think that Ghanaians still suffer from chronic memory loss and therefore cannot recollect the over GH200 million SADA funds invested in trees that burned down, and the guinea fowl miraculously flew to nearby Burkina Faso without a trace.

Although a competent court of jurisdiction has convicted and sentenced four of the numerous NDC officials over funds meant to provide suitable employment for the youth of Ghana, former President Mahama must eat humble pie and apologise to Ghanaians for supervising such a mess.

Besides, former President Mahama definitely owes discerning Ghanaians an unconditional apology over the scandalous bus branding, the Brazil World Cup, SUBA, NCA, SSNIT, and the Ford Expedition Vehicle, amongst others.

There are those who do not understand how and why Ex-President Mahama could find it somewhat convenient to chastise Akufo-Addo for allegedly implementing the Free SHS policy at the expense of other developmental projects (see: ‘Free SHS crippling other sectors: Mahama, classfmonline.com/ghanaweb.com, 24/02/2018).

Former President Mahama was reported to have poured his heart out during one of the NDC’s 2018 unity health walks: “The problem this government is facing, and it is in their own interest, is that Free Senior High School is absorbing all the fiscal space they have, and so almost every dollar you have, you are having to put it into Free Senior High School. So you can’t pay District Assemblies Common Fund, you can’t pay NHIS (National Health Insurance Scheme), you can’t pay GET Fund (Ghana Education Trust Fund), you can’t pay other salaries and things because all your money is going into Free Senior High School.”

In fact, the seemingly inconsistent remarks have left deserving doubts in the minds of discerning Ghanaians as to whether, if voted into power, Mahama will have the will and commitment to maintain Akufo-Addo’s Free SHS.

Somehow, Mahama prefers “Progressively Free” (whatever that means) to NPP’s
Comprehensively Free SHS.

Unsurprisingly, therefore, the good people of Ghana cannot fathom how and why the NDC’s ‘Progressively’ Free SHS, which has a meagre budget of GH48 per student, is better than the NPP’s full payment.27 per student per year.

Unquestionably, Ex-President Mahama and his government’s unpardonable incompetence and catastrophic errors in judgment resulted in excessive public spending, a less efficient tax system, a needless high public deficit, the destabilization of national budgets, heightened capital flight, and the creation of perverse incentives that stimulated income-seeking rather than productive activities.

On the whole, the successive NDC governments have proven to be the worst economic managers who can never improve the socio-economic standards of living of Ghanaians.

From the look of things, unless former President Mahama decides to render an unqualified apology, the good people of Ghana will continue to vent their disgust over his dreadful errors in decision-making, which culminated in harsh socio-economic living standards.

Shockingly, despite the irrevocable coarse governance that brought about their heavy defeat in the 2016 and 2020 general elections, the NDC loyalists hold a phantom hope that they will bounce back and recapture power in 2024.

But some of us, as a matter of principle, do not envisage the NDC returning to power anytime soon with former President Mahama, judging from the unprecedented economic mess he left behind.