News

Sports

Business

Entertainment

GhanaWeb TV

Africa

Opinions

Country

We Are Still Recovering From Election Defeat- Lokko

Eva Lokko Ppp

Wed, 19 Dec 2012 Source: Kelvin Dartey

The Progressive Peoples Party’s (PPP) Vice Presidential Candidate Ms Eva Lokko has voiced her disappointment at the results of the December 7 polls which the PPP came third.

The party only managed to poll 0.59% of the total votes cast in the recently-held general elections.

In an interview with Accra based Citi FM, Miss Lokko said thee PPP was was still trying to come to terms with the defeat it suffered in the last elections.

She said, “I was disappointed in the results... I just have questions. I think the best way to describe my feeling is that I do not understand the results because we performed, we talked to Ghanaians, Ghanaians told us in our faces they were tired, we saw the poverty, we saw the difficulties, we saw where there was no water... and yet the results are saying we are okay.”

She orated that, contrary to what she and her team discovered during the campaigning period ahead of the elections, the results of the suggests that Ghanaians were content with their living conditions,.

She said: “Ghana is developing, Ghana is okay, there is no poverty, there is no ‘dom so’ [black out], so of course I do not understand.”

Ms Lokko also mentioned that the PPP aimed to find out, "what went wrong in the elections, “where it went wrong, why it went wrong."

"We are not talking about ourselves; we are talking about the whole process. We are talking about the electoral system. We are going to review them, we are going to analyze, we are going to come out with our findings because a lot of the things that happened, it does not compute,” she lamented.

Madam Lokko added: “Change the electoral system, make it an electronic system, put contingency plans in place, do it early, educate people so everybody knows. 250,000 rejected votes is not acceptable; it shouldn't happen because this 250,000 could have made somebody else win. We don’t know whose votes were rejected so it’s not a fair system as it stands because any small thing, 'people are not well educated, people didn’t have time to understand it'.”

According to her; “I was so happy when I heard biometric, I thought we were going electronic so I missed out of doing my monitoring. So when I finally realized that we still have to go manual and that it is the registration and the verification, I was surprised.

Source: Kelvin Dartey