Menu

NDC parliamentary candidate reveals he spend GHC300,000 on Madina primaries

Francis Xavier Sosu33 Francis Xavier Sosu, NDC parliamentary candidate for Madina

Tue, 27 Aug 2019 Source: yen.com.gh

Francis Xavier Sosu, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) parliamentary candidate for the Madina constituency says he spent GH¢300,000 on campaign in the build up to the party’s parliamentary primaries.

He stated that the money went into things like feeding of delegates, transportation, fuel for campaign vehicles, amongst other expenses.

“For now, I can’t say for a fact but I’m sure it should be somewhere over GH¢300,000. That is from somewhere July 2018 till now. It may be more, I am yet to reconcile….

Generally, the key elements include posters, branch visitations and most likely you would have to convey them; cost of transportation, feeding, cost of buying fuel for your team and sometimes petty requests coming from delegates; you take care of medical bills, school bills and so on,” Xavier Sosu said in an interview with Citi FM.

According to the lawyer, the expenditure cannot also be described as vote buying as many Ghanaians want to suggest.

He opined that the amount of money spent by a candidate do not have any direct correlation on who becomes the eventual winner of an election.

Sosu further added that what he spent on the delegates during the NDC primaries can only be described as a show of “love and care”.

Francis Xavier-Sosu won the slot to become the NDC’s parliamentary candidate for the Madina constituency with 662 votes against his opponents, Sidi Abubakar, Ibrahim Faila Fuseini and Haija Rukaya, who had 480, 219 and 16 votes respectively.

YEN.com.gh earlier reported that the police administration has started inviting applicants on standby from the 2016/2017 recruitment application process through their email addresses.

The Ghana Police Service also cautioned the public to be wary of fraudulent persons who may want to take advantage of them following the reopening of the police recruitment process.

Source: yen.com.gh
Related Articles: