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People's National Convention (Ghana)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

People's National Convention
LeaderBernard Anbataayela Mornah
ChairmanAsaki Sampson Awingobit
General Secretary[Awudulai Ishaq ]
1st Vice ChairmanMartin Anafo
National OrganiserAbas Nuhu
National youth OrganiserMark Ewusi Arkoh
National Women's OrganiserEsther Osei Danso
National treasureEmmanuel Akazabre
FounderHilla Limann
Founded27 July 1992 (1992-07-27)
HeadquartersArts Centre, Accra
IdeologyNkrumaism
Socialism
Pan-Africanism
Colors    Red, green and white
SloganƐyɛ kubɛ
Service with honesty
Parliament
0 / 275
Election symbol
Palm tree
Party flag

The People's National Convention is a political party in Ghana.[1] After constitutional rule was restored back in Ghana in 1992 the party was formed by former President Hilla Limann based on ideals from the People's National Party which he led in the 1979 elections and won.[1]

Electoral performance

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1992 Elections

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The PNC has contested all national elections since the inception of the fourth republic apart from the 1992 parliamentary election, which was boycotted along with other opposition parties.

2004 Elections

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At the elections held on 7 December 2004, the party was part of the Grand Coalition, which won four out of 230 seats. Edward Mahama, candidate of the Grand Coalition, won 1.9% of the vote at the presidential elections.

2008 Elections

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At the December 2008 elections, the party won two seats in Parliament. For the fourth time in a row, Edward Mahama was the presidential candidate. He received 0.8% of the vote.

2012 Elections

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Hassan Ayariga was elected in 2011 by the party to stand in the 2012 presidential election.[2] Ayariga received 0.22% of the vote.[3]

2016 Elections

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The party elected new officials in 2015, with Edward Mahama becoming its presidential candidate and General Secretary Bernard Mornah becoming the chairman. The new National Treasurer is now Akane Adams who is taken over from his predecessor David Apasera, a former member of Parliament for Bolga Central.[4] Hassan Ayariga who led the party in the 2012 elections quit the party after losing to Edward Mahama and decided to start his own party All People's Congress.[5][6]

2024 election

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Bernard Mornah was nominated to be the presidential candidate for the PNC. He was duly registered as the candidate for the party but was disqualified by the Electoral Commission from contesting the position of President.[7]

Election results

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Presidential elections

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Election Candidate First round Second round Result
Votes % Votes %
1992 Hilla Limann 266,728 6.7% Lost Red XN
1996 Edward Mahama 211,136 3.0% Lost Red XN
2000 189,659 2.5% Lost Red XN
2004 165,375 1.9% Lost Red XN
2008 73,494 0.9% Lost Red XN
2012 Hassan Ayariga 24,617 0.22% Lost Red XN
2016 Edward Mahama 22,214 0.21% Lost Red XN
2020 David Apasera 10,882 0.08% Lost Red XN

Parliamentary elections

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Election Votes % Seats +/– Position Result
1996 226,643 3.3%
1 / 200
New Increase 4th Opposition
2000 224,657 3.4%
3 / 200
Increase 2 Increase 3rd Opposition
2004 186,226 2.1%
4 / 200
Increase 1 Steady 3rd Opposition
2008 117,732 1.4%
2 / 200
Decrease 2 Decrease 4th Opposition
2012 72,618 0.66%
1 / 200
Decrease 1 Decrease 5th Opposition
2016 42,236 0.39%
0 / 200
Decrease 1 Steady 5th Extra-parliamentary
2020 29,211 0.22%
0 / 200
Steady 0 Increase 4th Extra-parliamentary
2024 8,501 0.07%
0 / 200
Steady 0 Increase 3rd Extra-parliamentary

References

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  1. ^ a b "PNC marks 40th anniversary of Limann's presidency". Graphic Online. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  2. ^ "Profile of 2012 Presidential Candidates". Electoral Commission of Ghana. Archived from the original on 31 December 2014.
  3. ^ "Results of Presidential and Parliamentary Elections 2012".
  4. ^ "Edward Mahama dethrones 'Ayaricough' as PNC flagbearer; Mornah elected Chairman". Graphic Online. 13 December 2015.
  5. ^ "Hassan Ayariga forms All People's Congress?". Graphic Online. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  6. ^ "EC clears Ayariga's new APC for 2016 polls". GhanaWeb. 24 January 2016. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  7. ^ Enoch Darfah Frimpong; Dickson Worlanyo Dotse (20 September 2024). "Why EC disqualified PNC's Bernard Mornah, Janet Nabla and 9 others". Graphic Online. Graphic Communications Group Ltd. Retrieved 23 September 2024.
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