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AGENDA FOR NPP CHAIRMANSHIP

The main issues we’re confronted with as a party, include: Motivation, Lack of cash flow to help support critical activities necessary to execute long term plans, Factionalism, Individualism, Tensions between some MPs and Executives, Tensions within party executives and Transparency.


The Supreme Court ruling has also changed the dynamics of the game and we cannot operate the same way we’ve been operating. Things have got to change.
We need New Thinking and a New Direction.


Party Financing


Party financing has been a big issue and executives, who in themselves are volunteers, are called upon to, not only give of their time, but use their often scarce resources to fund the day to day activities and other running expenses of the party, from rent to funeral donations. This is most severe, especially in the so called orphan constituencies.


Members of Parliament also have to spend their salaries and allowances to support the constituency party as well as provide interventions in the constituencies.


The party, as a whole, relies on donations and contributions from a few business folks and well-wishers as it has no effective and efficient means of raising money from its members and supporters. Most people tend to donate and contribute funds a few months to a general election when the campaign is at a feverish pitch and when they think we stand a chance of winning.


If the party is to plan and prepare for the long term, it needs cash flows. It'll need money to come in periodically on a weekly, bi-weekly and monthly basis to fund year round activities and interventions necessary to build, train, prepare and support the executives and candidates to identify our supporters, engage them, win floating voters, get supporters and floating voters out to vote and to protect every ballot cast for the NPP. Until this is done and especially, given the nature of our main opponent, it'll be very difficult for us to undertake the necessary activities to win an election, unless by an act of God.


The following are the activities we shall pursue to raise cash flows for the party:
a. Dues: We shall implement One-Man-One-Vote (OMOV). Every card bearing member of the party of good standing will cast his/her vote in primaries to elect our candidates. To be of good standing will be to pay your dues every month from the start of the program, without fail, till the elections. GHC1 to vote parliamentary, GHC2 to vote presidential.


A little over 5 million people voted for us in the last election and we have many members in the diaspora, which we estimate to be over 2 million. Our target will be 1 million people each giving us an average of GHC1 per month. We shall make it possible for these people to register online, be issued with free NPP ID cards, and pay their dues online, by text, at various locations across the country, including rural banks and mobile money. Our members will be able to do these things wherever they may be.


I have already had my developers in the UK work on the platform and database software to support OMOV. It is this platform that is being used to prepare the polling station albums across the country. Uploading, processing and printing of polling station officer information for the albums is just the beginning of the journey to OMOV. People are thinking albums what I am doing is much bigger. I have already provided the platform for OMOV.


b. Business Ventures: The electoral laws of Ghana encourage political parties to engage in ventures to help generate funding to support its activities. For a pro-business party like ours, one is left to wonder why we've not been able to use our very strong brand to generate cash flow through the provision of services.


Why have we not looked at setting up, for example, an insurance company? If we have such a company, we shall draw expertise largely from our membership to provide a best-in-industry insurance service. With our strong brand recognition, I have no doubt that this will grow in a very short time to be the biggest and best insurance company in Ghana. Our members will be trained to work as brokers and agents thus providing them with employment and helping them to become self-reliant. By law, everyone who owns a vehicle has to have insurance....the question is not whether or not they'll decide to insure, but WITH WHOM. And, given our passionate support base and the level of insurance service we'll be offering, I believe insuring with an NPP Insurance company will be a no brainer.


c. We'll also take control of our franchise and license people to produce paraphernalia.


These are by no means exhaustive and the combination of all of our ventures will generate the cash flow we need to run a modern political party as great as ours.
No one person or few individuals can generate the funds we need to keep this party running on a daily basis. I believe we can support our constituencies with a minimum of GHC1,000 per month and each regional Office with a minimum of GHC5,000 per month. I'll work with the entire executives, patrons, members of council of elders, supporters and well-wishers to achieve this within six months of my taking office.


Unity


No matter how hard we've tried, this has continued to elude us. Factions, based upon personalities, have plagued the party. This is extremely dangerous as these alignments are not based on ideas, but blind loyalty. There are some people within our establishment who thrive and benefit from this cult worship and therefore actively promote it. They tag people as belonging to one faction or the other and push that they be excluded from the process. This has a similar effect as tribalism, sexism and racism, if not worse. People are judged by their tags, tribe, gender, age or colour rather than their talents, knowledge, creativity or innovative ideas.


We therefore go into elections, not only at half strength, but with those excluded, in certain cases, working against us. We must make it unprofitable for people to tag others as being ‘somebody's’ man. It blinds us and we don't get to harness all the talents available within the party. This happens at all levels of the party - flag bearer factionalism, parliamentary candidate factionalism, executive factionalism.
Some people think you have to be an old man or look old and condescending to be able to get people to work together. I salute age and revere our elders and it is true that with age comes wisdom, but I beg to differ.


There can be no peace unless it is in people's personal interest to co-operate. This is the art of peace making and, with all due respect, has nothing to do with age.


There's no way two people can be the same. Indeed we should actively promote pluralism, but it should be based on ideas. If I am elected as chairman, we will assure every member of the party that his or her needs and aspirations will be met and natured in the NPP. We will assure them that these needs and aspirations will be met as they work for the NPP to achieve its objective of winning power to develop Ghana in Freedom.


We shall assure them that should, whoever we put up as candidate for parliamentary or presidential elections win, he or she will not use the power of parliament or the presidency to victimise anyone. This assurance must be objective. We will institutionalise the consultative process within the party in the exercise of executive and legislative power. Every appointee, when we are in government, must be screened and endorsed by the regional and constituency branch he or she belongs to.


When I was chairman of Greater Accra, we championed a document famously known as the MOU. This document, which was an initiative of the Greater Accra regional executive committee, travelled the country and there was consultation with regional executive committees to help shape it. It was also presented to the National Executive Committee of the party and won wide endorsements. The document was endorsed by six out of the seventeen aspirants, including the two leading candidates in the 2007 presidential primaries.


After the primaries, the flag bearer formed a committee, chaired by Mr. Appiah Menkah, of which I was made a member, to further refine and make it a working document as a sign of his commitment to seek consultation with the party in the exercise of his executive powers should he become president.


I UNITED the party behind the MOU. People UNITED behind the document not because I was an old man, indeed I was six years younger than I am today. The elderly, the youth, the executives, the members of the National Executive Committee and leading Presidential aspirants all UNITED behind the document because it was in their interest to do so.


We will revisit and promote this document among members of the party. This document will strengthen the party and assure all members that it pays to sit put and work wherever you may find yourself in the party. This document will kill sycophancy, kill the personality cult creeping into our party and encourage 'factions' based on ideas.


If we're able to achieve this, it will not only cut down the sycophancy and tagging, but also direct resources towards the regions, constituencies and polling stations where they are most needed and promote co-operation within the party. It will not pay to go to the candidate's house, when you wake up in the morning to tag and lie about others; and the polling station member or executive who may have no way of accessing our leaders will be motivated to stay put and work as he or she will be recognised and will be made to feel a sense of ownership of the victory regardless of where he or she volunteers.


No one - current executives, members of parliament, former executives, members and supporters, who are not executives and may never become executives, but tirelessly work for the party, - should be left out.


As chairman of Greater Accra, we had semi-annual events to recognise and present current executives, former executives and supporters with awards. It made them feel a part of the system. I shall do same as National Chairman.
Unity is being at one in purpose. Unity is not agreeing all the time. Even enemies can rise above petty and co-operate to eliminate common threats as in the case of Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill versus Hitler. They (Roosevelt and Churchill), though seriously opposed to Stalin’s political sytem, were one in purpose. That purpose being to eliminate Hitler! Personal interests and self-preservation drove them to work together not an elderly or big person.


On MP retention vs. Succession Promotion


Every big party in the world has had to balance the retention of experienced and knowledgeable parliamentarians, the nurturing of its youth and promoting succession. This can create so much rancour and acrimony, which if not well managed, can cause a party to lose, even in its stronghold.


We must preserve good MPs and at the same time encourage and prepare our youth to contest primaries to take over from bad MP's.


We must come up with a very objective succession plan that clearly defines how we'll replace bad and, or ailing, public officials from our party.


What I’ll do is to lead in building a system that will identify potential within the party and, irrespective of their age, status in society, tribe or family ties groom them by, among other things, supporting their education and encouraging them to run for office within and without the party as a way of preparing them for government and higher responsibilities. They will serve as interns and assistants to our MPs and government officials when we are in power.


They will be steeped in our tradition and learn ways to govern democratically and promote the use of capital as the way of getting each and every Ghanaian to reach the highest measure of his/her creation and contribute to the collective and the poor and needy in our society.


A good MP is defined as one who:


1) is able to help in promulgating laws that will create the needed environment for peace and development for his constituents and Ghanaians at large
2) relates well to his constituency executives and works with them to deliver on interventions in the constituency and the party's manifesto
3) relates well with members of the party in the constituency and the people he represents, regardless of party affiliation.


These therefore will be the criteria we shall use to determine whether or not an MP must be retained or contested at primaries.


The MPs NPP peers in parliament will evaluate him/her. His constituency executives will evaluate him. Members of the constituency will be polled as well on his/her performance. This shall be a continuous assessment. We shall weight these three criteria and strike an average. If the sitting MP gets a weighted average of more than 50%, he/she will not be contested in a primary. But if the MP gets less than 50% he/she will be contested.


A sitting MP will, therefore, have his/her work cut our for him/her and will know what to do to get himself/herself retained. Hopefully, with this in place, our MPs will not have to keep looking over their shoulders and will know that 'slash and burn' politics, knocking executives' heads together and dividing the constituency to preserve their position will not get them anywhere. These criteria will force even, so referred to as, 'bad' MPs to work towards becoming 'good' MP's; not good to a few, but good to their constituency executives, the party, their constituents and the country. They will work towards creating harmony, co-operation and help forge a unity of purpose.


Why would anyone want to remove such an MP ?


I'll lead a team that will go around the country to all our members and sell this to them, in the same way, we did with the MOU. Their input will enhance and refine the document and make it acceptable to all. We shall seek to enshrine this in our constitution in time for the next primaries.


On Intra Executive Fights


The executives' roles and responsibility will be clearly explained to them and trained to deliver as we did in Greater Accra when, for a whole year, we brought in Dr. Roger Koranteng, a lecturer from GIMPA, to educate our members and members of parliament, every fortnight on the party's constitution, their roles and responsibilities as officers, teaching them how to co-operate and relate to each other and providing them with leadership and management training to help them better lead in their constituencies. This helped reduce tensions in the constituencies and forge better co-operation.


The executives, as far as I am concerned, have these main responsibilities:


1. identify and document all those who voted for the party in the preceding election
2. identify floating voters
3. identify those who will never ever vote for us
4. strengthen our supporters
5. turn around swing voters and get them out to register, vote and protect the votes
6. expand the membership and get them to be of good standing.
Executives will be evaluated and rewarded based on these deliverables.
Any funding above GHC1,000 per month to a constituency, will be indexed to their ability to achieve the above stated goals - they'll have their work cut out for them. This is how we’re going to measure the work of the constituency executives and determine whether or not they, as a whole, not individuals, will be returned. Hopefully, this will get all executives to work as a team as that’s the only way to ensure their individual survival.


The bottom line is that the party must be well resourced at the grassroots for effective party building efforts and I am ready to help resource the party at that level. It must be done. Our grassroots deserve it. The days of top heavy national campaign teams are over.


Internal and General Elections


When elected as the national chair, I promise solemnly that I will fully commit myself to the oath of office that I will swear before our party members and all Ghanaians. I will boldly and fearlessly promote and defend the best interest of our Great Elephant Party!


I will be in the national chair to conduct clean, free and fair presidential and parliamentary primaries. I will rally the party behind whoever wins as our Flag bearer and those who win as parliamentary candidates for victory in the 2016 presidential and parliamentary general elections. Those who contested in the 2007 presidential primaries will attest to this. As the Greater Accra Regional Chair, I respected each presidential candidate and, my executives and I, co-operated with their campaign teams.


Is NPP, the Great Elephant Party an Akan party?


No…Never! After Executive elections, the NPP, recognising the need to create a national party, appoints additional officers. The selection of the additional officers is done to ‘reflect the national character of the party’. This is enshrined in our constitution. The NPP is the only party in Ghana that has such a provision in its constitution.


The NPP is a national party with a Great tradition. I will ensure that the national character of our Great Tradition is truly reflected nationwide at the polls. Under my chairmanship, we shall lay equal emphasis on our strongholds as well as those constituencies and regions where we are weak.


As a grassroots person myself, I am intimately aware of the challenges at the grassroots and I will not relent in finding practical solutions to them, including stepping up our capacity to raise funds at all levels for our grassroots activities.
Championing Matters of Youth


I am a strong advocate for active youth participation in our political and national development process. Does championing matters of youth make me any too young to become a champion National Chairman? I beg to differ. I believe that the youth, 18-40 year olds forming the largest segment of the voting population, must be primed and mobilized for political action. I also believe that it is our responsibility to identify the youth with talents and skills and groom them to become successful top business people, local industrialists, experts and political leaders. Indeed the youth are our future and for this reason, when given the nod as your next National Chairman, I intend to initiate a national programme, dubbed “Forever Young” to rejuvenate our Great Elephant Party and keep it youthful and dynamic. The youth should therefore relax. As their strongest advocate, I am with them all the way.


As Greater Accra Regional Chair, I helped find jobs for the youth and stood behind people who were considered too youthful or too poor to go to parliament. Today many of them are parliamentarians - I have a record.
Women and Children Issues


Championing women issues is no exception for me. My passion lies with making gender equality work for talented and skilled women as well. My national chairmanship will actively promote and support Women-in-Development programmes and gender balance policies within our Great Elephant Family. As Greater Accra Chairman, I championed women who are now in parliament with one in the leadership.


Upcoming National Election


It is my intention to run for the national chairmanship as I believe I have the track record and have shown that I am an agent of change. I have built and re-engineered institutions; I have created opportunities and, most importantly, have successfully benchmarked best management practices, mobilized resources, organized training and coordinated members and executives of the party to implement change agendas at high levels – all without government assistance. I have risen through the ranks. We are confronted with a highly resourced opponent. To match them booth for booth will require massive resources starting now and not four months to election.


I shall take my message to all members of the party within and without Ghana and hope and pray that the good people of this party, under the guidance of our heavenly Father, will vote for change and a future where each and every member of the party’s ambitions and interests will, not only be protected, but natured. For it is only when our interests are aligned that we can win power, save and put this country back on the road to real recovery.

Long live NPP, long live Ghana.
Kukrudu Eishie Rado! Rado!! Rado!!!

About Sammy Crabbe:
Sammy Crabbe is the immediate past Chairman of the Greater Accra Regional branch of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), a former member of the National Executive Committee and a former member of the Party’s National Council. He rose through the ranks.
Sammy Crabbe is the founder of Omanye Money, the first truly global mobile money platform, based in the United Kingdom, with relationships that spun the entire globe. Other Omanye brands include Omanye Energy drink, Omanye Potato Chips, Omanye Voiceline, and Omanye Globile, a global mobile telephone network. He is also a founder and President of GIA-USA LLC, Salt Lake USA and a founder, shareholder and board member of Ghana International Airlines Limited.
Sammy was the Deputy Head of Marketing at Capital Telecom. He thereafter setup ACS-BPS, the first data-entry company, which at one time became the biggest private company in Ghana. He also helped set up CTI-TECH (First Medical Transcription company Ghana) one of the first call centres in the country, Mary Greenslade Information Services. He has consulted on various major outsourcing projects.
Mr. Crabbe is a former President of the Business Outsourcing Association of Ghana and the Chairman of The Crabbe Foundation, a charitable organisation in Ghana.
Sammy Crabbe holds an MBA in International Marketing (cum laude) from the International University of Monaco, Monte Carlo, Monaco. He is married to Sandra Crabbe, a lawyer and, together, they have a lovely daughter.

To learn more about this campaign please contact
Seji Saji
Tel: 233264642229

 

December 01, 2013
 

   
     


 

   

 

 

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