Tag Archives: IPAC

2024 Elections Agenda: EC holds IPAC meeting today

The Electoral Commission (EC) is scheduled to hold an Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) meeting today.

The, objective is to address outstanding issues ahead of the December 7 general elections, particularly the just released electoral calendar, which is already drawing some protests.
The governing New Patriotic Party, NPP and the National Democratic Congress, NDC have both raised reservations.

According to them, they were not consulted for any input and are yet to receive official communication regarding the calendar.

According to the Director of Research and Elections of the NPP, Evans Nimako, all what they know is the formal invitation for an Inter-Party Advisory Committee (IPAC) meeting to be held on Thursday, March 7, 2024.

“The NPP has not received any official communication from the EC concerning the programme of activities for the 2024 presidential and parliamentary elections.” Evans Nimako explained.

The NDC which has been chasing the EC to release the electoral timetable is equally worried.
The NDC describes the public disclosure of the timetable without any input from political parties are problematic.

The party’s Deputy General Secretary, Mustapha Gbande, describes the approach, unconventional and undermines Commission’s reputation.
“What has been published in the Daily Graphic is not a document for stakeholders to consider because the EC must, within the competent discharge of their responsibilities and good faith, sign a document under either the letterhead or the logo and communicate it to the parties.”he explained in a radio interview.

“Political parties do not accept correspondence from the EC through publications, and what is even more shameful for them is to come back and say they did not leak it. This is the same way they will leak the 2024 general elections.”

EC PROPOSED TIMETABLE

According to the Electoral Commission’s timetable, published by the Daily Graphic newspaper, public education ahead of mass voter registration begins from April 1, 2024 to May 26. The voter registration exercise is to take place from May 7 to May 27, 2024 to be followed submission of provisional voters’ register to political parties; exhibition of voters register to take place between July 9 to 18; Exhibition of voter register is scheduled for July 15 and 24.

The Commission also plans to begin replacement of missing voter ID cards from May 30 nationwide. Presentation of nomination forms shall take place between September 9 to 13, 2024 and the balloting for the Presidential candidates shall take place on September 23, Parliamentary balloting – September 24 while December 2 has been slated for Special Voting.

The Commission hopes to announce final results for both Presidential and Parliamentary elections within three days.

NDC returns to IPAC meetings after National Peace Council’s intervention

The opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) has rejoined the Inter Party Advisory Commitee (IPAC) meetings with the Electoral Commission.

The decision follows an intervention by the National Peace Council, NPC at a meeting held at Peduase in the Eastern Region on Thursday, December 14.
The stock-taking conference, attended by other stakeholders, was to assess institutional progress towards building the required resilience for credible, transparent, and peaceful general elections in 2024.

Myxyzonline has learnt NDC’s return was based on condition that IPAC maintains its consensus status whereby decisions twill be influenced by the consideration of all parties in the interest of Ghana.
Prior to the official announcement by the NDC, the Chairperson of the Electoral Commission (EC), Mrs Jean Adukwei Mensa, made an appeal to the NDC to rejoin IPAC.

She admitted that the party’s contribution was invaluable to the democratic process of the country.
“I would like to use this opportunity to invite the leadership of the National Democratic Congress to our IPAC meetings. We do realise that since 2021, NDC has not been present at our IPAC meetings. We miss them, we miss their fire. I extend an olive branch and in the interest of peace of our country. We invite them to IPAC,” she said.

In response, the National Chairman of the NDC, Johnson Asiedu Nketia expressed his party’s commitment towards efforts at shaping the country’s democratic and electoral processes.
He however emphasized the need for the C must ensure that IPAC assumes its original “consensus building” status towards the implementation of electoral reforms.

“On behalf of the Party, we accept the appeal from the National Peace Council that we should consider returning to IPAC, but we want to return to IPAC and not any other forum”. – he explained
Mr Nketia added. “The other side is for us to work to make sure that IPAC returns to its consensus building days…the issues that blocked our return should be dealt with before our next IPAC meeting,”
He also expressed concern with the EC’s efforts towards making the Ghana Card the sole identification document for the Commission’s proposed continuous voter registration exercise.
The NDC argued that the move had the potential to disenfranchise about one million voters, a position the EC had debunked.

“We will support it if everyone had the Ghana Card,” Mr Nketia said.

Chairperson of the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE), Ms Kathleen Addy, in a brief remark, said the 2024 Election was peculiar in the wake of political instability in the West Africa Sub-region.

“We are more vulnerable than before. We must work with each other and assure each other so that we can arrive at the elections and beyond the elections in peace and intact,” she said.

The NDC had boycotted IPAC meetings since March 2020 after the party expressed displeasure about the posture of the Electoral Commission (EC).
The Party had accused the Commission of failing to take into consideration decisions at IPAC meetings as part of its electoral reforms.

Myxyzonline