In eighty-seven (87) days Ghanaians will be going to the polls to elect both the next president (of Ghana) and members of Parliament who will serve them for, at least, four years. There are two main outcomes Ghanaians will be expecting: on the one hand, they will attempt to either retain the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) or give the National Democratic Congress (NDC) another shot at governing the country. On the other hand, Ghanaians will pray that Ghana remains a peaceful country, unshaken by the events of the elections.
For so many reasons, the elections this year will be different from those we’ve had in the past. This difference is not a bad thing. First, the pre-election campaigns by the various political parties have already generated a lot of interest, which is a good thing. The parties have registered a record number of people at their events, evidenced by the sea of faces captured on our television networks. Second, for good reasons and constitutional concerns, the incumbent John Agyekum Kufuor will not be on the ballot even though his party will.
Third, for the first time in the history of this country the voters’ register has hit a record 12,822,474, an increase of 16.7 per cent over the 2006 electoral list of 10,987,057, a provisional electoral statistics made available to the Ghana News Agency on Wednesday (9/10/08) revealed. This is interesting in and of itself, because there could be a huge turnout on Election Day, which will be crucial to deciding who wins and to our assessment of Ghanaians’ involvement in the political affairs of the country.
Even though Nana Akufo-Addo and Prof. Atta Mills are not new faces in Ghanaian political circles, they are yet to taste the presidency. Leave out acting positions! Both of these candidates are running on the records of achievements that their respective parties recorded during their eight years of service (they rendered) to the nation. This is a good thing, because Ghanaians can compare and make informed choices. After all, politics and seeking political office are all about records, achievements, and experience.
However, there is one challenge about this year’s elections. In our part of the world an election hardly ever takes place without some pockets of or major pre- or post electoral violence of some sort. That is vintage Africa! We (Africans) seem to have inextricably tied our destiny to perpetual violence that has been our undoing. Many examples abound in Rwanda, Liberia, Togo, Kenya, and, lately, Zimbabwe. Of course, we can also mention our beloved country, Ghana where political violence is becoming a daily occurrence.
That is not to say that even in the advanced democracies there are no election-related skirmishes. In fact, it is important to mention that even the United States which prides itself in being the beacon and hub of democratic activities went through a testing period in 2000, as the world watched in amazement how it handled the infamous Florida case.
As infamous and testing as this case was in the US, however, it exemplified and dramatized the vicissitudes of the human condition as well as how the law is respected in cases of this nature. Human beings are all the same everywhere—irrespective of the socio-politico-economic considerations and geo-political differences that exist. No one wants to lose. In fact, it is tough to lose anything. It is more so, especially when people put in their time, resources, personnel, and their lives on activities that may define the course of their lives and future. Thus, it makes sense for individuals and political parties to want to make sure that they succeed and win after a long process of campaigning and crisscrossing the nation.
That said, however, there are other elements about the human condition that people and politicians in our part of the world never get:
- recognizing that only one person/party/group can win in a race,
- accepting defeat, and
- moving on to do what they were doing before they contested for those offices/positions.
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