Samuel Atta Akyea is former NPP Member of Parliament for Abuakwa South
Google search engine

Former Member of Parliament for Abuakwa South, Samuel Atta Akyea, has responded to NPP founding member and economist, Andrews Kwame Pianim’s assertion that the party risks fading like the CPP if internal conflicts are not addressed.

Dr. Pianim had cautioned that the New Patriotic Party (NPP) must resolve its internal wranglings to avoid becoming irrelevant in Ghanaian politics, like the Convention People’s Party (CPP).

However, the former legislator, in an exclusive interview with TV3’s Beatrice Claire Abena Adu on Monday, September 15, 2025, stated that the party stalwart’s prediction won’t suffice.

“God will not honour Kwame Pianim’s prophecy that the NPP will become as irrelevant as the CPP in Ghana’s politics,” Atta Akyea said on TV3.

Pianim had argued in an interview with TV3 that the NPP’s future rests on the shoulders of its younger members, who must take responsibility for the party’s direction.

“They have to listen because it’s their future. As I said, it’s not my future. If we do not listen and restructure our party, the NPP will become as irrelevant to the politics of Ghana as the CPP has become,” he cautioned.

He criticised the party’s decision to elect a flag bearer before holding grassroots elections, describing it as a “top-to-bottom” approach that undermines rebuilding efforts. “I don’t agree with it. We are trying to restructure the party. The young people who are running the party have to look and listen so we get the direction right,” he said.

He disclosed that several founding members are dissatisfied with the party’s current trajectory and have been engaging the leadership in Parliament, the National Secretariat and the Council of Elders to press for a stakeholder meeting. Such an engagement, he argued, is necessary to review strategy and unite the party’s base.

“They are worried about the direction the young people are taking the party. I’m hoping we’ll get our act together to rebuild, restructure and build a united front to move forward,” Mr Pianim added.

He stressed that the first step towards resolving the party’s challenges is acknowledging that there is a problem. Without unity and reform, he warned, the NPP risked going the way of the once-dominant CPP, whose political influence has significantly diminished.

But according to Atta Akyea, one of the NPP’s founding fathers, Dr. Joseph Kwadwo Kyeretwie Boakye Danquah (JB Danquah), made the ultimate sacrifice for the party, reinforcing its spiritual roots to resist any form of destruction.

“Dr. JB Danquah went to Nsawam prisons. He paid the ultimate price. This party has spiritual roots, and nothing can destroy NPP,” he stated.

The NPP is preparing for its presidential primaries in January 2026, with Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, Kennedy Ohene Agyapong, Dr Bryan Acheampong and Kwabena Agyei Agyapong among the contenders.

NPP internal wranglings ‘normal political dynamics’ – Atta Akyea