National Convention Party (Ghana)

The National Convention Party (NCP) is a political party in Ghana that existed between 1992 and January 1996.

National Convention Party
LeaderGeorge Hagan
Founded1992
Dissolved1996
Merged intoConvention People's Party with People's Convention Party
IdeologyNkrumaism
Progressivism

Formation

The party was formed in 1992 after the ban on political parties was lifted by the military Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC) government. Its first leader was Kow Nkensen Arkaah.

1992 elections

The NCP contested the 1992 presidential election in an alliance with the National Democratic Congress (NDC) led by Jerry Rawlings and Every Ghanaian Living Everywhere (EGLE) led by Owuraku Amofa. The alliance put forward a single candidate for president, Jerry Rawlings and a single vice president candidate, Ekow Arkaah on November 3, 1992. They won 58.4% of the popular vote[1] and became the first President and Vice President of the Fourth Republic of Ghana.

In the 29 December 1992 Parliamentary election, the NCP won 8 out of 200 constituencies, becoming the second largest party in parliament.[2]

Merger

The "Nkrumahist" parties decided to merge before contesting the 1996 elections. The People's Convention Party (PCP) and the NCP then announced the formation of the Convention People's Party on January 29, 1996.[3] This signaled the end of the NCP as a standalone party.

Notes

  1. "Elections in Ghana:3 November 1992 Presidential Election". Africa Elections Database. Albert C. Nunley. Retrieved 2007-04-17.
  2. "Elections in Ghana:29 December 1992 Parliamentary Election". Africa Elections Database. Albert C. Nunley. Retrieved 2007-04-17.
  3. "Arkaah says he can work with Rawlings despite". General News of Thursday, 1 February 1996. Ghana Home Page. Retrieved 2007-04-17.


gollark: But you *can* be blind to it in some contexts by structuring things so you don't actually know it.
gollark: Well, for conference organization, probably just do the decision about whether to have a panel or not (is that how this works) without the reviewers knowing stuff about the speaker.
gollark: Not just paying *more* attention to it.
gollark: Designing systems which are blind to this sort of trait entirely.
gollark: I don't really agree with "fixing" discrimination by just discriminating more in a different direction.
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