The National Organizer of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Henry Nana Boakye, popularly known as Nana B, has strongly criticized the Tamale High Court’s decision to annul the 2024 parliamentary election results in the Kpandai Constituency, describing the judgment as a grave threat to Ghana’s democratic stability.
Speaking at a press conference at the NPP headquarters in Asylum Down, Accra, on Tuesday, December 9, Nana B said the party was deeply alarmed by the ruling delivered on November 24, 2025, a judgment he described as one of the most troubling in Ghana’s electoral jurisprudence.
“Today marks one year and two days since Ghanaians cast their votes on December 7, 2024, we gather here not in celebration but in profound alarm to expose a brazen and sustained assault on our democracy. This judgment represents a vicious attack on the will of the people and a shocking perversion of justice,” he said.
The Tamale High Court annulled the Kpandai parliamentary election and ordered a rerun, a decision the NPP insists has no legal basis.
Nana B condemned the ruling as “a constitutional abomination” and “an unmitigated legal disaster,” insisting the court’s reasoning was flawed, fundamentally reckless, and jurisprudentially bankrupt.
“This judgment threatens to dismantle the very foundation of our electoral justice system, It is catastrophically dangerous. If allowed to stand, it will unleash chaos that will consume our democracy,” he added.
He stressed that the NPP does not oppose the judiciary as an institution but would not remain silent in the face of what he called a grave miscarriage of justice.
Nana B declared that the NPP would resist the ruling with full force within the confines of the law.
“From today, we say enough. From today, we sound the alarm to every Ghanaian who cherishes democracy. From today, we declare our fearless resistance to this dangerous precedent,” he stated.
He assured the public that the NPP will pursue every legitimate avenue to overturn the decision and protect the integrity of the Kpandai parliamentary mandate.















