The “reset agenda” has met its first true test of fire, and the smoke rising from Ayawaso East carries a stern warning: a party that allows its mandate to be auctioned today will find itself owned by the highest bidder tomorrow.
In a decisive move that balances legal caution with moral urgency, the investigative committee chaired by the veteran statesman, Hon. Kofi Totobi Quakyi, has released an interim report that serves as both a verdict and a manifesto.
Following allegations of widespread vote-buying during the constituency primaries on 7 February 2026, the findings are as clear as they are condemning. The committee has concluded that the distribution of material goods, specifically motorcycles and television sets, to delegates constituted undeniable inducement, a practice that systematically erodes the integrity of the democratic process.
The Swiftness of Resolve
There is a rare and commendable efficiency in the party’s current posture, a testament to an institutional resolve that refuses to look away from uncomfortable truths. One must appreciate the remarkable swiftness with which the leadership moved to address these grievances.
The committee explicitly commended the rapid initial responses from H.E. the President, the General Secretary, and the Majority Caucus in Parliament, whose collective resolve signaled that the era of institutional silence is over.
Working under the crushing pressure of a looming election deadline, the Totobi Quakyi committee demonstrated a profound sense of duty, sitting for just a single day to produce a comprehensive analysis of the crisis. This Herculean effort, necessitated by the imminent filing deadline for the March 3 by-election, reflects a party determined to prove that its “reset” is a reality, not a slogan.
Process Over Personality
While the report acknowledges that the issues involving Hon. Mohammed Baba Jamal Ahmed were the most extensively documented, it maintains a sophisticated institutional focus that looks beyond the individual.
The committee was careful to frame the crisis not as a failure of personalities, but as a failure of process. They noted that multiple aspirants engaged in these inducements, turning a democratic exercise into a high-stakes auction. The auction, they remind us, does not ask why you are bidding; it only asks how much.
The findings present a chilling juxtaposition: while the candidates remain valued members of the party, their methods have created a sustainable risk that excludes candidates of quality who lack personal wealth. It is a constitutional conundrum; the committee admits the NDC’s current regulations lack explicit provisions for such an annulment, yet to allow the result to stand would be to invite “undesirables” through the gates of the party.
A Mandate for Integrity
The path forward now lies with the Functional Executive Committee (FEC), which must decide whether to uphold the committee’s recommendation to nullify the results in order to protect the integrity of the process. The report asserts that the soul of the party cannot be bartered for material goods and that the right of members to choose candidates without inducement does not require codification before it can be defended.
If the reset is to mean anything, it must begin at home. The NDC has been handed a mirror by Hon. Totobi Quakyi and his team; the nation now waits to see if the party has the courage to act on the reflection it sees. The door on the monetisation of democracy must be shut now, while it is still the party’s to shut.
By Raymond Ablorh



