Member of Parliament from Damongo, Samuel Abu Jinapor, has expressed concern over the president’s assertion that he is cutting the size of government by only choosing 60 ministers and deputy ministers.
He claims that although this action has been portrayed as an efficiency boost, the government has only moved appointments to the President’s Office, leaving the taxpayer with the same financial load.
Mr Jinapor observed that the President has also increased the number of presidential advisors, staffers, and aides.
“The President is praising himself for appointing 60 Ministers, but what he has failed to tell us is that he has found a smart way of making up the numbers by appointing more and more people as Presidential Advisors and Staffers,” he stated in Parliament on March 5.
He was of the view that these appointees typically have the same status and privileges as ministers.
“The Chief of Staff is ranked just below the Speaker of Parliament but above a Cabinet Minister. Senior Presidential Advisors receive the same emoluments as Cabinet Ministers.
“Presidential Advisors are pegged at the same level as Cabinet Ministers who are not MPs, while Presidential Aides are treated as Deputy Ministers, with corresponding benefits,” he contended.
Since their responsibilities were merely transferred to the Office of the President, which has the same financial ramifications, he contended that the reduction in Ministries has not resulted in cost savings.
Mr Jinapor stressed that the Office of the President now has a growing number of high-ranking appointees, such as Dr. Valerie Sawyerr, a Senior Presidential Advisor on Government Affairs, and almost ten Presidential Advisors who cover a range of sectors, such as corruption, the economy, and diaspora affairs.
“There are also dozens of Presidential Staffers and Aides, assigned to specialised roles such as Economic Affairs, Special Aides to the President and Vice President, and regional operations.
“Notably, there is even a Director at the Presidency in charge of Agriculture and Agribusiness (Peter Boamah Otukonor), despite the existence of the Ministry of Food and Agriculture and the Ministry of Trade, Agribusiness, and Industry,” Jinapor added.
He further noted that this trend points to a political accommodation approach in which a new Presidential Advisor or Staffer is appointed in tandem with each significant campaign pledge.
The former Lands Minister went on to allege that the President has appointed 16 Presidential Staffers, each of whom is assigned to a region, despite his insistence that he will not name Deputy Regional Ministers—a policy that was initially instituted by President Akufo-Addo.
“Are these individuals just Deputy Regional Ministers under a different title?” he asked.
Mr. Jinapor raised additional concerns regarding the Office of the President’s communication team by revealing that it “currently consists of one Minister for Government Communications, one Presidential Advisor on Media, four Directors of Communication, five Deputy Directors of Communication, two Communication Specialists, five Technical Communication Assistants, one Media Aide, one Assistant Media Liaison Officer, and one Communications Consultant.”
“What at all are they going to communicate?” said the former minister.
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By Benjamin Aidoo