As I tried to stir a discussion on the GFA
Presidential election, the personalities that have filed to contest and their
campaign messages last Friday; I noticed that, some colleagues have been as
concerned as I am on the silence of virtually all the presidential hopefuls on
their plans to substantially change the state of Ghana football. The essence of my post was not to ridicule
any of the individuals who have formerly submitted their forms but to only
share my observations. Thus, I wrote on Facebook and Twitter:
“Perhaps
apart from Kurt Okraku and Nana Yaw Amponsah, who have given the public
snippets of their plans for Ghana football, if they're given the mandate as GFA
President, the rest have had no message. We may have to wait for their official
launch or when they become 'proper' candidates to see what will change
regarding their plans for our game. So far, for me, there's been nothing
convincing from Osei Palmer, George Afriyie and Fred Pappoe. I have no vote but
I'm afraid, as an observer, I've seen nothing impressive.”
I stand by this view despite the opposing
opinions others have on it. I acknowledge replies from the teams of Palmer and
Kurt, all inviting me to their media events. Kurt unveils his manifesto on
Tuesday while Palmer does his media launch on October 2. I have seen documents
spelling out the vision of Nana Yaw Amponsah and Amanda Clinton. I have heard
George Afriyie and Fred Pappoe speak vaguely on what they bring to the table.
From where I sit, sketchy media commentary by
the presidential hopefuls on their plans defeats the idea of making the general
public part of their campaign. The presidential hopefuls are yet to pass the
integrity test and thus declared fit for the contest. While they wait to be
cleared, they have, nonetheless been campaigning. Their campaigns ought not be
in the public domain.
The voting population they have to
meaningfully engage and win their votes are only 120. This small voting
population is within the public space but the sensible thing to do is to engage
them privately. I have wondered why people think I do not know this and that I
expect, the presidential hopefuls to mount radio and television platforms to
campaign. Only a novice would think like that. I do not expect the presidential hopefuls to be
busy with media campaign.
That will spell doom to their ambition but it
is also narrow-minded to assume that, the media and the public do not have to
know the plans of the presidential hopefuls for Ghana football because their
campaign must be on the quiet and to the 120 delegates.
The hopefuls have a duty to involve the public in their discourse. The public is a stakeholder in this enterprise although it is the 120 delegates who will chiefly be voting. The delegates must do Ghana football a good service. They must elect someone with a broad vision, unblemished character, impeccable leadership credentials, proven and demonstrable competence, to steer our football which is increasingly slipping into nothingness at almost every level.
The hopefuls have a duty to involve the public in their discourse. The public is a stakeholder in this enterprise although it is the 120 delegates who will chiefly be voting. The delegates must do Ghana football a good service. They must elect someone with a broad vision, unblemished character, impeccable leadership credentials, proven and demonstrable competence, to steer our football which is increasingly slipping into nothingness at almost every level.
The delegates must be guided by reason, not
superfluous or extraneous factors. We cannot afford a return to all the things
that triggered #12. A new era dawns. Those to usher us into that new era of
Ghana football are not the President and the Executive Council who will be
elected on October 25, 2019. It is the 120 people. Those with the power to vote
and to make choices as to who leads our football. Their choices will define
Ghana football. We can only hope that they choose wisely.

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