2010 Ghanaian New Patriotic Party presidential primary election


The 2010 New Patriotic Party presidential primary election was a nationwide election organized by the Electoral Commission of Ghana at the request of the New Patriotic Party of Ghana for the election of a candidate that would represent the party in the 2012 presidential and parliamentary elections. It was held on 7 August 2010. The New Patriotic Party is the biggest opposition party in the Parliament of Ghana with 107 members of parliament out of 230.

The contestants

The election contested by five aspirants. They were:
About 130,000 delegates were expected to exercise their franchise at 228 voting centres across the country.
The elections were conducted in 228 out of 230 constituencies in the country. There were no elections in two constituencies namely, Ablekuma South and North in the Greater Accra Region due to protracted court cases. Other constituencies like Obuasi, Subin and the latest, Asokwa, all in the Ashanti region which had also been bedeviled by lingering court cases have been cleared to vote.
Meanwhile, NPP delegates have been warned to avoid going to polling centres wearing party paraphernalia.
About 113,000 delegates are expected to cast their votes in the party's first expanded delegates’ conference where election would be done simultaneously in all constituencies across the country.

The results

At the end of elections Nana Akufo-Addo won an overwhelming majority of the votes to emerge as the winner of the elections.
The table below shows the entire national results obtained by each of the candidates.
PositionNameVotesPercentage
FirstNana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo83,36177.92%
SecondMr. Alan Kyerematen21,82020.40%
ThirdIsaac Osei1,1091.04%
ForthProf. Frimpong-Boateng3980.37%
FifthRev Kwame Koduah2940.27%

The winner

Nana Akufo-Addo who won the election had earlier represented the party as the leader in the Ghanaian presidential election in 2008. He lost to the current president of Ghana, John Atta Mills. Nana Akufo-Addo is the son of Edward Akufo, a former president of Ghana.