We often hear political commentators say
“oppositions don’t win elections, governments lose them”. What a load of
bollocks. A well organized, highly disciplined and clear thinking opposition
can take a term or two from just about any government. Politicians and political advisers must never
stop believing that an opposition can win the next election.
Opposition can always snatch power from even the most entrenched government basking in euphoria of massive public good-will. How the Republicans in United States recently recaptured control of the U.S. Senate and expanded their edge in the House of Representatives, giving them a majority in both houses of Congress for the final two years of President Barack Obama's presidency tell us that everything is possible in politics.
Opposition can always snatch power from even the most entrenched government basking in euphoria of massive public good-will. How the Republicans in United States recently recaptured control of the U.S. Senate and expanded their edge in the House of Representatives, giving them a majority in both houses of Congress for the final two years of President Barack Obama's presidency tell us that everything is possible in politics.
In recent times, the opposition New
Patriotic Party (NPP) members of parliament have come under heavy barrage of
criticism for not effectively holding the ruling National Democratic Congress
(NDC) government to account to Ghanaians from their first day. It seems the
honeymoon given to the NDC is still in motion. Almost all the scathing
criticism of the government has emanated from the Party`s communication outfits
and other political organizations and individuals with NPP sympathies.
Last year, Mr. Gabby Asare
Otchere-Darko, editor of Statesman went to town on the MPs lackadaisical
attitude towards the struggle and activities of their party. The criticism suddenly awakened the MPS, and
in an unprecedented manner joined the pressure group, Alliance For Accountable
Governance (AFAG) to stage the “Agbeii wo” demonstration. Until Mr.
Otchere-Darko took the MPs to the cleaners, they have not been taken active
part in demonstrations organized by AFAG.
It was as if the MPs needed a serious push from its constituents to be
effective.
Why is the NPP MPs perceived as
non-performing? In order to be able to hold the government to account,
opposition as the direct representative of the people need to perform their
watchdog role and bring out any secret deal the government undertake at the
blindside of the populace. In performing their parliamentary functions, the MPs
also owe their constituents and the party on which ticket they were elected
into the chamber. Most often the MPs get
so engrossed with their parliamentary functions more than their allegiance and
work towards their party. It is when this situation rises that, the supporters
of their party quickly get angry at the MPs for their total neglect.
However, let us also not lose sight of
the fact that one of the reasons why political parties find it so hard to rally
all its MPs/legislative members to tow party lines is that, parties no longer
have any control over who runs for office. In the modern politics, as practiced
in Ghana, elections are “candidate centered.”
Candidates choose to run, raise their own funds, build their own
organizations and win elections largely on their own, without significant help
from a political party. It presupposes that parties have little control over
the candidates that run under its labels.
Since 2009, Honourable Osei Kyei
Mensah-Bonso, the minority Leader had had difficult time organizing the NPP MPS
to follow party lines. Even in election times the party structures cannot
control the MPs and sometimes are forced to make concessions to them. Though
the party tries hard to generate funds for the aspiring candidates to execute
their campaign, but that money is woefully in adequate, as a result the
money-bag aspiring MPs and sitting MPS also make serious demands of the party. These
demands when not met, makes the candidates to do things their own way and that
behavior festers on after the elections.
Lobbyist organizations and corporate
institutions that supports a particular candidate for a particular constituency
as a result of its business interest in the MP`s constituency or a national
policy or bill serves as complete hindrance on the MP to kowtow to party lines.
In such situation, where a particular issue is of paramount interest to the
party but it will affect the interest of the clandestine financial backers of
the MP, the MP is most likely to be mute on the issue. This is a serious
happening currently going on in our democratic exercise but much attention has
not been given to it.
One other major factor is also the
creation or existence of safe seats. Most MPs that occupies the safe seats are
the notorious slackers when it comes to working assiduously to the benefit of
their party. They tend to be lazy and prefer to sit on radio stations in Accra,
rather than to visit their constituencies regularly to preach the policies
alternatives of their party and attacking the government of its electoral
failures, corruption and mismanagement of the economy.
But are the MPs the only ones that must
be blamed for recent NPP`s inaction and effective opposition to NDC? An NPP MP told me last year that “Here is the
hard truth: something we are doing isn’t quite working. Let’s now put aside any
notion that the media are going to carry our message to the public over the
next two years. They are not.” He was
pissed off that most blames are placed on the bosom of NPP MP`s for not helping
the party, when the focus should be on the grassroot mobilization. He opined
that the making NPP buoyant and effective critic of the NDC regime is not only
the prerogative of the MPs and few party heads at the Headquarters, but the
party must challenge the grassroots to help polish the its image with a plan to
enlist at least 2,000 “Patriotic ambassadors” to bypass the media by speaking
to one million voters — two per day for each volunteer — by 2016.
In his view
if NPP push for 100 supporters to take a lead and start a personal blog about
the party’s positions NPP can capture the entire reading public and internet
user-voters. He told me “Write your blog. Write letters to the editor. Call in
to the local radio talk show. Talk about why you support NPP and submit ideas
for 100 changes to be implement in 100 days if the NPP forms a government".
Whilst I share the laudable ideas of the
MP, I am still of the opinion that the MPs have an advantage of criticizing the
government and exposing corruption to undermine it. This can only be done when
the MPs get organized by having a Secretariat, where every staff member is
selected on merit – in opposition there can be no passengers. That also means
taking pragmatic steps to engage advisers with the most important policy, press
and forensic skills to assist them. The
Secretariat must have a staff and on the frontbench a mix of youthful
enthusiasm and experienced operators. As
the saying goes, “War-gaming” and forward planning should be part of NPPs,
weekly routine.
The MPs must come to the realization
that an effective opposition is more akin to an insurgent force than a standing
army and they must therefore be prepared to do detailed research on the
shortcomings of the government and its members,. Their Shadow Cabinet system
must be re-branded to make it possible to have a weekly meetings and properly
drafted policy papers circulated well in advance of the meeting. Conscious effect
must be made by the MPs to reconnect with the electorate – particularly those
who left them at the election. All
attempts must be taken to avoid ‘Do repetition of the sins of office from
opposition'.
The NPP MPS need to initiate serious
business of policy development early and reach out to those groups NPP probably
stopped listening to in government.
Gathering around as many outside sources of advice as possible will
engender a growing band of useful and well informed experts in any number of
areas who will happily give up their time to assist the party.
Most importantly, NPP MPs have to get
down to the business of constant campaigning on every platform that is avail to
them. Elections are won by those who campaign from the first day in the term,
not from the day the election is called. However, effective campaigning
requires discipline and adherence to processes by making sure media monitoring
never misses a day and valuable clips are collected, catalogued and stored.
Constant campaigning is only effective
if NPP MPs are willing do all the things listed above, alongside what their
party is also doing simultaneously. There are no shortcuts to winning
office. NPP MPs need to learn from what
the Republican Party utilized to effectively clinch a majority victory at the
Congress.
As Jonathan Chait rightly observed,: “The GOP has withheld
cooperation from every major element of President Obama’s agenda, beginning
with the stimulus, through health-care reform, financial regulation, the
environment, long-term debt reduction, and so on. That stance has worked
extremely well as a political strategy. Most people pay little attention to
politics and tend to hold the president responsible for outcomes. If
Republicans turn every issue into an intractable partisan scrum, people get
frustrated with the status quo and take out their frustration on the
president’s party. It’s a formula, but it works.”
NPP MPs must make itself as a useful
catalyst for the party to use the next one and half years to show they are a
party of government, and not a lazy ideologues, opportunistic and selfish
leaders who only care about their own welfare. NPP itself must show that they
can govern and that the public need to trust them by going to the every hook
and cranny of the country, with a simple message: ‘time for a change!” This is
not only a valid way to proceed, it’s a pretty likely outcome.
My own feeling is that both the MPs and
the party should pour major energy into extra-opposition activism and
prioritize elevating the voice of activists. Instead of a Minority Leader or
the Chief Whip and the National party heads being a person sitting in a palace
office, like a potentate, what these personalities must rather do is to find a
way to live and work among the people and be subjected to their pressures. That would be a valuable step.
The NPP must know that governments
thrive on divided opposition, especially the visceral internal divisions in the
main opposition group. It makes it easy for the incumbent to win elections by
fair or foul means. 2012 elections is a valuable epitome of what a fundamental
flaws in internal party work and lukewarm attitude of MPs refusing to go back
to their constituencies to campaign on the ground can affect our electoral
chances.
I know old habits are strong. In fact,
old pressures of institutions cannot be overcome in a day as individuals and
organizations tend to be persistent and preservationist. We all carry baggage.
But, with enough popular energy and pressure, I think we can succeed. As
activist and educator Effie Jones once said, "Failing to plan is planning
to fail."
We in NPP cannot afford to lose 2016 elections.
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