The Anatomy of Political Hypocrisy: How the NPP’s Double Standards Cripple Ghana’s Rule of Law

From grassroots fists in Mfantseman to mass blockades at EOCO—how political hypocrisy is crippling Ghana’s rule of law

Ghana's democracy is being systematically strangled, not by a lack of laws, but by an abundance of political duplicity. The New Patriotic Party (NPP), which historically prided itself on being the champion of property rights, intellectual discourse, and the rule of law, has undergone a worrying transformation. Within 48 hours, the nation has witnessed two startling examples of institutional subversion from the highest echelons of the party down to its grassroots.

At the top, we see party leadership mobilizing masses to picket the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) headquarters, disrupting public order to shield high-profile arrestee Dennis Miracles Aboagye from a GH¢55 million corruption probe. Simultaneously, at the grassroots level, a viral video showing chaos and physical scuffles at the Mfantseman NPP constituency office exposes how internal democratic systems are violently compromised when independent rules do not favor the local elite. This glaring inconsistency reveals a dangerous playbook: accountability is a noble concept—until it applies to them.

The Grassroots Breakdown: The Mfantseman Crisis

The recent physical altercations inside the Mfantseman constituency office are not isolated incidents of random passion; they are the direct byproduct of calculated procedural manipulation:

The National Double Standard: Shielding the Elite

The behavior at the grassroots mirrors the precise pattern of institutional obstruction exhibited by the national executive body:

Institutional Recommendations: Restoring Systemic Integrity

To break this cycle of hypocrisy and prevent political entities from operating above the law, Ghana must implement rigid institutional boundaries:

Ghana's development cannot survive a political class that views state institutions as weapons for containment and political parties as shields for wrongdoing. The simultaneous explosions of tension—from the fists flying in the Mfantseman constituency office to the rowdy street blockades outside the EOCO headquarters—prove that the ruling party’s disrespect for independent systems is a systemic flaw, stretching from the grassroots straight to the top.

If the NPP genuinely believes in the rule of law, it must lead by example. True democratic commitment means respecting the integrity of a voter's album in Mfantseman, allowing the courts to settle venue disputes quietly, and letting EOCO investigate a GH¢55 million probe without political interference. Ghana belongs to its citizens, not to political parties. It is time to retire the hypocritical rhetoric, stop the partisan shields, and let our national institutions do their work.

✍️ Retired Senior Citizen
For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭

Teshie-Nungua
akpaluck@gmail.com

A Voice for Accountability and Reform in Governance

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