John Bilson (politician)

John Bilson was a Ghanaian doctor and politician.

Career

In May 1969, he founded the All People's Congress, which despite some support from the Legon Observer failed to make any impact in the 1969 parliamentary election. He contested the 1979 presidential elections as leader of the Third Force Party: in the first round of voting on 18 June 1979 he came sixth out of ten candidates, with 2.8% of the vote. In 1981, the Third Force Party was one of the opposition parties which tried to merge into the All People's Party, although political parties were soon banned after Jerry Rawlings's coup at the end of the year.[1]

In 1992, Bilson launched a lawsuit challenging the eligibility of Rawlings to stand for the presidency, on the grounds that he was not a Ghanaian national.[2]

gollark: You can't *prove* something is morally correct unless you're assuming some kind of objective morality.
gollark: I want 2019 back.
gollark: You could always go to Madagascar.
gollark: Space is not really a very nice place to *live*.
gollark: Or more.

References

  1. Daniel Miles McFarland, 'THIRD FORCE (TF)', Historical Dictionary of Ghana, Scarecrow Press, 1995, p. 171
  2. 'Rawlings sued over nationality ', The Independent, 9 October 1992


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