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A renowned stalwart of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Kobina Arthur Kennedy has revealed that he has heard from the grapevine that former President JA Kufuor has advised ex-President Akufo-Addo to apologise to Ghanaians.

He said the suggested apology is to atone for the hardship imposed on Ghanaians during the tenure of the erstwhile Akufo-Addo administration.

“I have heard from the grapevine that President Kuffour has suggested to President Akufo-Addo to apologise to Ghanaians. This is an advice I agree with. He must apologise,” Mr Arthur Kennedy said on TV3’s KeyPoints on June 28.

Mr Kennedy said this while contributing to discussions on the topic- NPP’s Internal Elections.

According to the former NPP flagbearer aspirant, he agrees with the suggestion because, during President Akufo-Addo’s reign, “There was impunity, there was corruption, there was arrogance of power, there was hardship.”

He comments come after former President Kuffour asked pertinent questions at the inaugural ceremony for the Patriotic Institute.

“How come our fortunes have been dwindling since 2016, 2020 and now our current state?” Ex President Kufuor asked.

In response, Mr Kennedy pointed to the severe hardship Ghanaians faced an the non-charlant attitude adopted by the President Akufo-Addo government.

“The electorates endured all that and decided to give them the sack during the election,” he said.

Contributing to the same topic, a former Director at the Ghana School of Law, Mr Kwaku Ansah-Asare said the NPP has lost its shine.

“The NPP, as we speak has no leader. There is a chairman who claims to be indisposed so everybody wants to be a leader. We need people loke the late BJ Da Rocha or Peter Ala Adjetey, with authoritative voices to put everybody in order. They have lost the basic ideology of the party,” he stated.

The NPP has slated January 31, 2026 to hold its flagbearer election. This is contrary to the provisions of its constitution which provide for the election of national, regional and constituency officers before electing a flagbearer.

This has stirred controversy among party faithful and political analysts.

However, speaking at the inauguration of the Patriotic Institute, ex-President Kufuor stressed the importance of selecting a candidate who can resonate with the broader Ghanaian electorate and offer practical solutions to national issues.

“It is one man, one vote, and if we want power, we have to present a person who will be convincing to the generality of the electorate,” he noted.

“We need to ask ourselves: will this man we are presenting help solve the problems of the community at large so the benefits spread across the board?”

He warned that indulging in identity-based rhetoric, especially from within the party, only reinforces negative labels from political opponents.

“The way we’ve been brushed as a tribal party — and now even religion is being included — if that comes from our own mouths, then I tell you, we are the ones perpetuating it,” Kufuor cautioned.