The Electoral Commission (EC) says it will not hesitate to sanction political parties, which fail to meet regulatory requirements, including being operational in two-thirds of the country.
The sanctions will include revoking the license and expunging the names of non-compliant political parties from the EC’s records.
Mrs. Jean Mensa, the Chairperson of the Electoral Commission, speaking during a visit to the national office of the Conventions People Party (CPP) explained that the exercise is not witch-hunting but in line with its mandate.
She was welcomed by Madam Akosua Frimpomaa Sarpong Kumankumah, the Chairperson of CPP, and other party officials.
Pursuant to the provisions of the Political Parties Act, 2000( Act 574), the EC is mandated to undertake an inspection of the offices of all the 30 registered Political Parties at the National, Regional, and District levels.
The delegation, which included Dr. Bossman Eric Asare, the Deputy Chair in Charge of Corporate Services, and Mr. Samuel Tettey, Deputy Chairman in Charge of Operations, and other staff are to ascertain if the parties were functioning and meeting the requirements of Act 574.
As part of the checklist, the team interacted with the staff of the party and inspected office equipment, including computers.
She stated that there are about 20 political parties registered and 12 more applications pending.
“Indeed, the EC recognizes that Ghana is a growing democracy with other challenges.
However, there were many political parties that had no presence at all, others were having challenges. The Commission will make a decision on the outcome of this exercise,” she said.
Madam Kumankumah commended the Commission for embarking on the exercise to ensure sanity.
She said that the CPP had offices nationwide, however, some of the leases for the offices had expired, and the party is taking steps for renewals.
Madam Kumankumah urged the EC to extend some support to the political parties to function well.
The team also visited the Progressive People’s Party, but could not hold a long meeting because their offices were flooded.
The broad objective of the inspection is to ascertain whether political parties registered by the EC meet the provisions as stipulated in the law.
The specific objectives are to find out whether the political parties have presence and functional offices at the district, regional and national levels, whether the internal organization of these parties are consistent with democratic principles, and the sources of funding these parties.
Latest Stories
-
From tee-off to royal dinner: Telecel Ghana 67th Asantehene Open
5 mins -
Training and Equipping Teachers: Nexus for success of new SHS, SHTS and STEM curriculum
11 mins -
Business leaders urged to uphold ethics for sustainable growth
17 mins -
One student per tablet policy: More tablets for Ashanti Region Schools
2 hours -
BOSAG officially unveiled; positioning Ghana as Africa’s premier BPO destination
2 hours -
Gold Fields may sell smaller mines in Ghana after Osisko acquisition
2 hours -
Nigeria plans $28bn spending for 2025 budget, minister says
3 hours -
Africa grapples with forecasting challenge as weather disasters loom
3 hours -
Europe’s flying taxi dreams falter as cash runs short
3 hours -
Al Fayed’s brother Salah also abused us, women say
3 hours -
I blame the Church for my brother’s death, says Zimbabwean sister of UK child abuser’s victim
4 hours -
South Africa cuts supplies to thousands of illegal miners hiding underground
4 hours -
Nigeria head five Afcon 2025 qualifiers as Ghana given hope
4 hours -
Trump’s pledge to axe the Department of Education explained
4 hours -
‘Major supplier’ of people-smuggling boats arrested
4 hours