The much-awaited Kwesi Botchwey committee report on the crushing defeat of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) at the 2016 polls has recommended a “peacemaking and healing tour”.
Prof. Kwesi Botchwey who presented the 455-page report said the NDC must assemble “credible and eminent” personalities in the party to lead the tour.
He was speaking at the NDC headquarters in Accra where national executives gathered to receive the report of the 13-member committee.
After six months of work, the committee has handed the report to the NDC National Chairman Kofi Portuphy. The chairman Prof. Kwesi Botchwey proceeded to feed the media with some seven recommendations contained in the report.
In the report subtitled “listening to the voice of the grassroots”, Prof. Botchwey pressed the NDC leadership to consider the peace-making and healing tour as “extremely important”.
This is because it will create the “necessary conditions for any serious work that needs to be done” in restructuring the party, he said.
The Committee also touched on the big issue of the party’s biometric register which become a source of discontent within the grassroot.
There were claims the register had been infiltrated by non-NDC members while recognisable party figures at the branch level could not find their names on the list.
Prof. Kwesi Botchwey committee recommended, that party must work to “restore the integrity of the bometric register”
The report mentioned the expansion of the party’s electoral college in its recommendations.
In 2014, the NDC announced an expansion of its electoral college from 4,000 to about 250,000. The NDC General Secretary explained “our intention is to scrap the electoral college system and then allow every party member to vote when it comes to our primaries for the selection of parliamentary candidates and then for the selection of the presidential candidates.”
The 13-committee suggested the expansion of the electoral college to include ordinary party members needs to be re-examined to restore confidence in the democratic novelty.
This recommendation will also find favour with the former Health Minister in the erstwhile National Democratic Congress government, Alex Segbefia who blamed the defeat on the decision to expand the party’s electoral college.
A key recommendation was that the party needs to reconnect to its social democratic roots. This recommendation is expected to sit well with the NDC General Secretary Johnson Aseidu Nketia.
A week ago, he lamented that “even some ministers didn’t understand the social democractic” political philosophy. He has called for an ideological training school for the party.
The Botchwey Committee report also pointed out the party has a weak intellectual and research base and recommended steps be taken to crowd the party with critical thinkers.
Other recommendations included restoring the capacity and effectiveness of party organs believed to have been sidelined in the run-up to the 2016 elections.
Several splinter groups were formed alongside formal party structures, a situation believed to have resulted in competition for campaign resources.
Prof. Kwesi Botchwey committee also wants to see the party to strengthen the youth and women wings of the party.
He told the party’s national executives at the press conference Monday, “my job is done…it is up to you to implement recommendations”.
The New Patriotic Party (NPP) 2016 presidential candidate Nana Akufo-Addo surprisingly secured a resounding one-touch victory by polling 53.85% of total valid votes cast against incumbent NDC Presidential candidate John Dramani Mahama who managed 44.40%.
The party also outperformed the governing National Democratic Congress in the parliamentary election by increasing its seats from 122 to 169 to form the majority, while the NDC saw its representation drop from a majority of 148 to 106.
Tasked to find out why the NDC performed poorly, the former Finance Minister Prof. Kwesi Botchwey Committee toured the country meeting the grassroots of the party.
Source: myjoyonline.com