
The recent surge of endorsements for Kennedy Agyapong by individuals closely linked to former President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is less about ideology or competence and more about political comfort.
Many of these former insiders have rallied behind Mr. Agyapong not because he presents a clearer policy vision, but because Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia represents a leadership style that is orderly, technocratic, and potentially reflective. A Bawumia presidency naturally raises institutional questions: Who advised what? Which decisions worked, and which did not? Such questions are not vindictive; they are fundamental to governance and reform.
For those whose political relevance is rooted in past proximity to power, this prospect is unsettling.
Kennedy Agyapong, by contrast, offers familiarity. His confrontational style, aggressive defence of allies, and resistance to introspection provide reassurance to those anxious about scrutiny or marginalisation. In this sense, his candidacy functions as political insurance insurance against audits, against fading influence, and against a changing political order.
Many of the former power brokers understand that their influence is diminishing. A Bawumia-led administration is likely to introduce new actors, new thinking, and a firmer stance against entitlement politics. That shift threatens entrenched interests whose primary qualification is past loyalty.
Yet while endorsements circulate freely, the Ghanaian voter appears focused on different criteria: temperament over tantrums, competence over connections, and calm leadership over constant confrontation.
History is instructive. Nations do not progress through noise, but through discipline, foresight, and leadership that looks beyond immediate political survival.
Ultimately, this endorsement spree reveals a clear choice. Dr. Bawumia challenges the past; Kennedy Agyapong protects it. Ghana must decide which future it seeks.
NYC CHAPTER Women’s Organizer – USA
