General News of Thursday, 15 September 2016

Source: starrfmonline.com

NDC didn’t steal NPP’s ideas - Kennedy Agyepong

Kennedy Agyapong, Assin North MP Kennedy Agyapong, Assin North MP

New Patriotic Party’s lawmaker Kennedy Agyepong has lashed out at his party over claims that the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) has stolen its ideas going into the December 7 polls.

The Assin North MP said the Danquah-Busia-Dombo tradition simply has no proof about their allegations since the governing party had launched its manifesto ahead of the main opposition party.

“No one has stolen your ideas, you simply have no proof,” the maverick politician said on Adom TV.

Agyepong added: “It’s about time we stopped this child’s play and focus on issues that will move the nation forward. We are in an election year and as an opposition party ready for power, we can’t afford to counter the ruling party over unnecessary issues…most especially when we want power.”

“You can see now, what they [NDC] call the highlights of their manifesto was just a photocopy of what the New Patriotic Party has been saying and it is amazing that we still have these people talking to the people of this country,” John Boadu, the acting General Secretary of the NPP told journalists Wednesday in Accra.

However, the NDC has debunked that claim.

Speaking on Joy FM Wednesday, Kofi Adams, who is the campaign coordinator of the NDC said, “nobody is copying Nana Addo,” and that the policy highlights presented by President Mahama are captured in the government White Paper.

He said the NDC since its inception in 1992 have been social democrats and that it is simply untenable to claim that they [NDC] are stealing social democratic ideas from a capitalist entity [NPP].

“If today, you have seen the sense in what we have stood for since 1992 and you are coming towards our side then you now want to claim what has been our rights all this while,” he added.

The NDC, he continued, is very focused stating that “Nana Addo has never come out with any such good ideas. Nana Addo is talking about one dam one village. He doesn’t see the difference… at least yesterday [Tuesday] the president taught him the difference.”