Mills Institute founder and president Koku Anyidoho has vowed to stay a bona fide member of the ruling Nationwide Democratic Congress (NDC).
He insists he was neither suspended nor formally expelled from the celebration.
Mr. Anyidoho stated he continues to determine with the NDC and maintains cordial relations inside its ranks, including that he’s all the time prepared to have interaction with anybody who reaches out to him.
“Opposite to what some say, I’m nonetheless within the NDC and have a membership card. Somebody stated so (that I used to be suspended) with none documentary proof. That’s politics,” he stated.
“Folks do not even know that I went to Flagstaff Home final 12 months, as a result of I used to be working with the Christian Council and we needed to go to Flagstaff Home and nobody stopped me from getting into,” he added in an interview on Channel One TV.
He additional famous that his openness extends past celebration traces, saying he maintains friendships with leaders of each the NDC and the opposition New Patriotic Get together (NPP), underscoring his perception in political dialogue and private relationships throughout the divide.
“With the identical ticket, we went to Dr. Bawumia’s (NPP’s 2028 flag bearer) thanksgiving service. They wish to do propaganda with this,” he famous.
“I’ll date anybody, I’ll date Dr. Bawumia, I’ll date Nana Addo, I’ll date Gabby Otchere Darko, I’ll date anybody who will give me the door.”
Mr Anyidoho, who served because the NDC’s communications director and later deputy common secretary, was beforehand an in depth ally of the late president John Evans Atta Mills, however has been perceived by some observers lately to have been politically sidelined throughout the celebration following the previous president’s loss of life.
Nevertheless, he insisted that such perceptions didn’t mirror his present place, insisting that he maintains good relations with the NDC and continues to help the celebration’s broader beliefs.
