ACCRA, Ghana
Ghana’s main opposition leader
John Dramani Mahama looks set to win December’s presidential election, an
opinion poll showed on Monday, placing him ahead of his main challenger, ruling
party candidate Muhamudu Bawumia.Ghana's former president and current main opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) party presidential candidate John Dramani Mahama, 65, addresses supporters during a political campaign
Global InfoAnalytics, an
Accra-based research group, released poll results on Monday that saw Mahama
winning 52%, followed by 41.3% for Bawumia. The poll has a 1.9% error margin.
It found that voters were
mainly concerned about the economy, jobs, education and infrastructure.
Mahama invested heavily in
infrastructure during his 2012-17 presidency, when he faced criticism for power
shortages and economic instability. His government was also embroiled in
corruption allegations, although Mahama was never directly accused.
He is running again as the
candidate of the main opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC).
Bawumia, an economist and
former central banker, is running for the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP),
which grappled with Ghana’s worst economic crisis in a generation.
Both candidates have presented
plans to boost the economy and improve livelihoods.
Ghana, the world’s second
largest cocoa producer, defaulted on most of its $30 billion external debt in
2022 after years of overstretched borrowing.
Akufo-Addo’s government
secured a 3-year, $3 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund in
2023 and is now on the final lap of a painful process required for the money to
be disbursed.
The Economist Intelligence
Unit predicted an NDC win in October due to the NPP’s economic record. Fitch
Solutions published a similar forecast that month.
Both Mahama and Bawumia are
from northern Ghana, a historic NDC stronghold where the NPP has been making
inroads.
Political analyst Alidu Seidu
of the University of Ghana said the election would probably be a very close
contest between the two.
Results were difficult to
predict and a run-off vote was likely, he said.
No party has ever won more
than two consecutive terms in Ghana’s democratic history.
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