The NPP Organiser Race Threatens to Consume Its Own
By Gifty Boateng
The New Patriotic Party’s impending national organiser contest is shaping up as a high-stakes elimination bout not between rival flagbearer camps, but within the house of Dr Mahamudu Bawumia himself.
At least five declared aspirants, all bearing the 2028 presidential candidate’s political imprimatur, are preparing to slug it out for the party’s crucial mobilisation machinery. Incumbent Henry Nana Boakye is vacating the slot after a single term, seeking elevation to first national vice-chair.
What should signal orderly succession is instead shaping up as fratricide.
THE CONTENDERS
Daniel Nii Kwatei Titus Glover arrives with unfinished business. The former Greater Accra Regional Minister and Tema East MP placed second in the 2022 contest and has spent four years nursing the wound. He openly campaigned for Bawumia despite personal proximity to Ken Agyapong a balancing act that failed him last time. With the man who defeated him now exiting, the 62-year-old calculates this is his final shot.
Kwame Baffoe, better known as Abronye DC, brings a different arsenal. The Bono Regional chairman is seeking national migration after years as Bawumia’s most pugnacious defender and occasional liability.
His running battle with Agyapong throughout the presidential primary descended into near-fisticuffs during the 2025 ‘thank you’ tour, after which the regional chairman reportedly established a television channel specifically to counter Agyapong’s media stable.
Opponents whisper that Abronye’s methods, while effective, extracted a political cost the flagbearer’s camp has yet to fully account.
Salam Mustapha presents the proximity candidate. The incumbent national youth organiser worked directly under then-Vice President Bawumia at Flagstaff House and is regarded inside the camp as something closer to protégé than apparatchik.
His political commentaries are laced with threats to unleash grassroots fire language that animates the base but unsettles nervous elders. Among the five, he has logged the longest continuous service alongside the flagbearer, stretching from opposition through government and back.
Moses Abor, Greater Accra regional youth organiser, is the youngest on the slate and the least patient with hierarchy. The businessman has publicly wrapped himself in Bawumia’s banner and calculates that incumbency at regional level can translate to national reach. He is not visibly intimidated by seniors.
Emmanuel Korsi Bodja occupies different terrain entirely. The Volta Regional Organiser is bidding to become the rare Ewe voice at the NPP’s top executive table after two terms consolidating the party’s foothold in formerly hostile territory.
He has served as National Council member and Dean of Regional Organisers the quiet technocrat among street fighters. Crucially, his 2028 flagbearer preference remains opaque, making him either the slate’s sole independent or its most disciplined operator.
THE DYNAMIC
The clustering is without recent precedent. Previous national organiser contests typically drew from across aspirant camps, producing outcomes that balanced presidential primary factions. This cycle, five aspirants are chasing one slot while claiming loyalty to the same man.
Campaign insiders acknowledge the predicament privately: whoever loses carries grievance. The flagbearer’s office has issued no signals and is unlikely to anoint publicly. Yet the absence of direction carries its own risks. Each aspirant interprets silence as permission.
Abronye DC insists his methods delivered Bono for Bawumia. Titus Glover argues experience outranks effervescence. Salam Mustapha points to proximity and institutional memory. Moses Abor claims the youth vote he already holds. Bodja offers the quiet case: the organiser who built where the party had nothing.
WHAT COMES NEXT
Nominations open mid-year. Between now and then, the five will test whether Bawumia’s camp possesses the discipline to consolidate or whether the 2028 project sustains its first significant internal wound in a contest that, on paper, should have been a coronation.
The mathematics are unforgiving: five enter, one emerges. The other four do not disappear.
NPP elders watching from the wings remember that national organiser controls the machinery that turns presidential campaigns into ground operations. They also remember that machinery, once awarded, is not easily retrieved.
For Bawumia, the race presents an unwelcome choice between loyalists. For the aspirants, it presents a starker proposition: eliminate your fellow traveller, or be eliminated by him.
The flagbearer’s camp has spent two years preparing for battle with its opponents. It now confronts the prospect of war with itself.
