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Opinion

What must Prof. Mills do differently?

Prof. John Evans Atta Mills assumes office on January 7 as Ghana’s third President in the Fourth Republic, basking in the fresh glory of the Ghanaian electorate. Public expectations are high that his government will do its best to improve the living standards of the people. As an intellectual, law professor, tax administrator, and politician, Prof. Mills stands tall on the political landscape today. It is, therefore, hoped that he will bring down his personal endowments to bear on how he governs the country for the next four years. To enhance the country’s constitutional democratic governance, he should come clean as someone who will not introduce “buga-buga” into how his government conducts the affairs of state. At the party level, he has an onerous responsibility to ensure that the NDC’s image is enhanced through the party’s manifesto and lessons learned from hindsight to give Ghanaians the relief that the Kufuor government couldn’t provide in spite of numerous promises and assurances. Now pushed to the background, the NPP is a wounded lion (not elephant!!), licking its wounds and counting on its representatives in Parliament to keep the NDC on its toes. Such is politics. Why am I tasking Prof. Mills with all these responsibilities all too soon? If we consider the fact that he had trailed Akufo-Addo in the Dec. 7 elections but ended up outstripping him in the run-off, we should realize that it was because the Ghanaian electorate saw in him (and the NDC) a better alternative than Akufo Addo and his NPP. This turn-around demands that Prof. Mills should do his best to justify that confidence as early and as resolutely as possible. There could be many things for him to do; but here are what I consider to be some pressing ones, to begin with: MEDIA RELATIONS Much of the bad press that characterized the first NDC administration could be attributed to the strained working relationship that existed between that government and the mass media. The Rawlings government’s unproductive relationship with the media must be a thing of the past. Prof. Mills should make himself available as the US President does, for instance, to relate to media practitioners without any fear of anything. After all, what will he have to hide if there is transparency in the way his government functions? Here are a few suggestions:
  1. There is need for the Castle Press Corps to be revived to create opportunities for journalists to have access to government officials at the Presidency and for them to provide information as and when called for;
  2. Openness in the dealings with the media should entail weekly press briefings apart from snap press conferences to allow the government to comment on issues of national and international importance as and when they occur;
  3. A Press Secretary who knows how to do public relations and journalism---not just anybody who will shoot his mouth anyhow and create problems---should be appointed;
  4. If possible, there should be Weekly Radio broadcasts to the nation---to address pertinent issues and prove to Ghanaians that the government is up and doing. After all, the US Presidents do so and gain from it. Opportunities should be created for the Opposition to respond to such Weekly Addresses so that Ghanaians can have both sides of the issues to instruct them on matters of public interest; and
  5. Freedom of Information Act should be promulgated to allow the public to have access to information that will help them monitor the performance of government and offer opinions on national issues.
LABOR FRONT The first NDC government’s relationship with the workers’ front was not all that cordial---the spate of industrial agitations and strikes did not help matters. The second NDC government must reach out more to civil servants (and indeed all workers) for them to strike a balance in what to do to maximize productivity and be handsomely paid as such. I want to see a reduction in industrial agitations, which eventually muddy the political waters and lead to disaffection. The government always stands to lose in that situation. Teachers had always been at the losing end in their agitations with the first NDC government and that of Kufuor’s NPP. What happened between the NAGRAT and the Kufuor government is a good example. Such strained relationships must be a thing of the past under the new NDC government. As an academic, Prof. Mills should know better the cost of such bad blood between teachers and the government. He has already made promises and we will hold him tight to ensure that he fulfills those promises. Other identifiable organizations within the labor front (doctors, nurses, etc.) should also not be left out. In effect, the Mills government must be proactive right from day one so that any thorny problem that rears its head is tackled expeditiously at its formative stages and nipped in the bud before they get out of hand to torment the government. PUBLIC IMAGE Prof. Mills must hesitate in doing or saying anything to antagonize any section of the citizenry. Guarded comments should be the order of the day. I recall how former President Rawlings angered the people of Cape Coast and Elmina (Fantes, generally) with his expensive joke about sanitation, for which he has not yet been forgotten by those who felt implacably offended. That expensive joke about the cat’s covering its faeces---which he intended for human beings to learn a lesson from---could not be far from the truth; but it had a very damaging impact on his relationship with the people. Prof. Mills must be alert to avoid such pitfalls. GOVERNANCE When the people get food to eat, they will play with and not fight the government. Food production for local consumption and export must be promoted through better policies and support from the government and its agencies. Thus, the Ministry of Agriculture and its numerous structures must no more remain dormant. If they can’t support agricultural production, they must be scrapped. Prof. Mills and his new NDC administration must work hard to demystify government (as begun by Rawlings) so that the people can participate in government in a more coordinated manner. Local Government is important and the various structures must be supported to perform their functions. Development must start from the bottom and it must involve the people directly. After all, when the people know what to do for themselves, they will do so without looking up to the Central Government in Accra. There are other opinion leaders (chiefs, religious leaders, organized social and economic groupings) to whom the Prof. Mills government must relate productively. It shouldn’t be difficult to make it a standing order for government functionaries to consort with such powerful forces to determine lines of action to take in matters concerning the people in the various localities. After all, good governance implies that the government officials should not see themselves as the only people who have solutions to national problems. Consultations with these forces must be encouraged and problems solved in a concerted manner. FIGHTING CRIME Armed robbery and other acts of indiscipline must be clamped down upon heavily as JJ Rawlings sought to do but which the Kufuor government couldn’t sustain as expected. The government should rebuild the Ghana Police Service and other para-statal organizations entrusted with the responsibility for providing national security. As a former Chairman of the Police and Prisons Council, he should know better what to do to enhance service conditions and capabilities of these vital institutions. The determination to fight or stop corruption must go beyond lip-service. We all saw the futility of Kufuor’s Office of Accountability, which operated from the Office of the President. How ridiculous!! Institutions for stemming corruption (CHRAJ, Serious Fraud Office, the Judiciary, and the Police Service) must be retooled and supported to perform their legitimate functions without any official interference. Ghana must not continue to be seen in the international community as a gateway for drug trafficking. Every available means must be used to clamp down on the vice. It means reorganizing all the institutions entrusted with enforcing laws and regulations on the drug menace. The Narcotics Control Board is one organization that must be seriously purged. CONTACTS WITH THE GRASSROOTS: OPEN COMMUNICATION CHANNELS Prof. Mills must ensure that a good line of communication is established between him (and his office) with the grassroots. Former President Rawlings excelled in that area by opening his eyes and ears to every bit of information (whether credible intelligence or damaging baseless rumours) that did the rounds and he virtually knew all that was about to happen or was happening even in the remotest parts of the country. He was even aware of the rumors about him personally. I remember the 1992 rumours on “Akonta be si fem” and how he jokingly responded to it at the NDC’s 1992 pre-election rally at the Jackson Park in Kumasi. He proved to Ghanaians that he was with them even though based at the centre of governance in Accra. He is still in touch with Ghanaians and loved for that matter. Being with the people means being sensitive to their feelings and complaints. Prof. Mills must avail himself of every opportunity to know what is happening around him and far away from him. In that sense, he will not be left destitute of the proper intelligence that he needs to monitor public opinion about is government’s performance. It will be wrong for him to surround himself with sycophants whose main agenda would be to tell him only what is pleasing to his ears. He shouldn’t feel comfortable among such people because they will mislead him. JJ Rawlings didn’t allow himself to be misled by such characters. Prof. Mills must learn a hard lesson from Kufuor’s disengagement from the local Ghanaian scene as he embarked on senseless foreign trips to satisfy his personal penchant for travelling. He must go on foreign trips sparingly so that he can relate better to the situation on the ground. After all, Ghanaians elected him into office to be with and among them, not to spend more time outside the country and return as a “visitor.” That perception of Kufuor contributed largely to the loss of confidence in him and his NPP, especially within the context of rumours on increased per diem allowances. GOVERNMENT APPOINTEES Government appointees must be screened properly and the bad nuts (people who think being in politics is an opportunity for wealth making at the expense of the country) shooed away. Ghanaians want to see a new crop of appointees who will not inflict pain on the people but work well with them to generate wealth for mutual benefits. We’ve seen too much of the opposite and cannot afford to have the NDC appointees do so in this new order. A strict code of conduct for government appointees must be enunciated and enforced such that errant ones are not only dismissed from office but also punished. If any deserves prosecution, that’s what must be done to him/her so as to instill public confidence in the government. Appointments and dismissals must be made in a more cultured manner than by mere radio announcements, as often happened under the Rawlings government. Ghanaians deserve better than a government which stands helplessly before problems that (while languishing in the opposition) it slavishly identified and appeared to have ready solutions for but cannot tackle now that it has been given the mandate. They expect the new NDC to make that crucial difference; hence, their willingness to “test” it for the next four years. Will Prof. Mills and his government make that magical break from the deadly politics of incompetence, inordinate grabbing and flaunting of wealth, as well as wanton display of arrogance, which turned out to be the NPP’s Waterloo? Or will Prof. Mills step into Kufuor’s “lame-duck” posture to sink the NDC again? I hope not. I am confident that the second NDC government will do all it can to achieve its goals and retain the goodwill that it has just won from Ghanaians. Eyes have already begun watching. My best wishes to you, Prof. Mills and the NDC!! Credit: Michael J.K. Bokor, Ph.D. [mjbokor@ilstu.edu]

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.