He said the corrupt nature of the NDC will guarantee their stay in for about 50 years.
The two-time former Member of Parliament for the Berekum constituency said Ghana has not had a leader âas corrupt as former President John Dramani Mahamaâ and his âcabal of thievesâ.
âI think the majority of Ghanaians agree to the principle that NPP are better trustees of the national purse than the NDC and that is why we won 2020 and that is why we are going to win 2024 and we are going to break the eight-year jinx and the NDC will not come to power until the next 40 to 50 yearsâ.
He said this in response to a press conference by Sammy Gyamfi of the NDC accusing the ruling government of thievery.
He said: âHe [Sammy Gyamfi] is accusing the New Patriotic Party administration of corruption. It is an attractive song, an attractive melody, which all opposition parties throughout the world, always use to castigate those in governmentâ.
âWhat I expect Sammy Gyamfi to do or to tell Ghanaians is to give specific analysis, specific details that the minister for so so and so has done so so and so; that this contract or this or that has been undersigned or over-invoicedâ.
âGive specific examplesâ, he said, adding: âWe have appointed a special prosecutor whose job is to ensure sanity on the public purse, so, if you think you have evidence of corruption against any public official, more so ministers of state, and youâre accusing them of corruption, carry all your data to the special prosecutor and secure convictionâ.
Sammy Gyamfi
âThat will make your case credible but if you go to stand on a treetop and hold a press conference and you use words like âcorruption, abysmal failure, incompetentâ and so on, you make me laugh and it is sadâ, the former lawmaker said.
He continued: âSammy Gyamfi is playing an old song, an old song which we have heard so many times before. Compared to when John Mahama was President of Ghana, the corruption that took place in this country has he forgotten so soon where a whole car was caught on the road to Kumasi full of millions of cedis. What happened to that case? Nobody knows. No official explanation [given] and even the auditor-generalâs report [had said] the accounts of central government had gotten missing and cannot be accounted for under the watch of John Mahamaâ.