Engineer Kosi Dedey blasted Ghanaians for having serious character problems when they take important government jobs. The policy expert slammed Electoral Commission head Jean Mensa for completely changing her behavior after leaving the Institute for Economic Affairs. Dedey appeared on Channel One TV's Breakfast Daily program Wednesday to share his harsh views about leadership failures. He called Mensa's recent actions deeply troubling and disappointing for the entire country. The analyst warned that citizens should worry about how people transform when they receive powerful appointments.
Dedey questioned what caused Jean Mensa to become inconsistent and unpredictable after taking the electoral job. He compared her current performance to her previous work at the economic institute and found major differences. The engineer pointed out that Supreme Court judges and election officials get guaranteed terms but still fail to maintain proper standards. He wondered why appointed leaders struggle to understand their duties and bring good character to their roles. Dedey expressed sadness about how trusted positions seem to corrupt people who should serve the public faithfully.
The Electoral Commission recently faced heavy criticism for ordering a rerun at 19 polling stations during the controversial Ablekuma North election scheduled for Friday. Opposition party New Patriotic Party members challenged this decision through the Accra High Court system. Justice Ali Baba Abature heard their legal arguments and rejected their application as lacking merit. The court ruling allowed the commission to proceed with their planned voting rerun despite political opposition complaints.
Dedey questioned what caused Jean Mensa to become inconsistent and unpredictable after taking the electoral job. He compared her current performance to her previous work at the economic institute and found major differences. The engineer pointed out that Supreme Court judges and election officials get guaranteed terms but still fail to maintain proper standards. He wondered why appointed leaders struggle to understand their duties and bring good character to their roles. Dedey expressed sadness about how trusted positions seem to corrupt people who should serve the public faithfully.
The Electoral Commission recently faced heavy criticism for ordering a rerun at 19 polling stations during the controversial Ablekuma North election scheduled for Friday. Opposition party New Patriotic Party members challenged this decision through the Accra High Court system. Justice Ali Baba Abature heard their legal arguments and rejected their application as lacking merit. The court ruling allowed the commission to proceed with their planned voting rerun despite political opposition complaints.