The New Patriotic Party (NPP) has launched a 23-sector policy committee framework aimed at strengthening its policy development process ahead of the 2028 general elections, with former Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia playing a leading role in the initiative.
No opposition party in Ghana’s democratic history has assembled anything approaching this scale of organised policy capacity. Previous opposition cycles, whether NDC in opposition post-2000 or NPP between 2009 and 2017, relied heavily on ad hoc policy teams convened primarily during election season, with limited cross-sector coordination and no standing research infrastructure.
The framework features 23 sector committees with full technical membership, a dedicated Policy Coordination Office, internal reporting mechanisms, and a phased deliverables schedule running through to 2027. Each committee is tasked not merely with critiquing the current government’s performance but with developing fully costed, implementable policy alternatives, the kind of detailed programming that can be converted directly into a governing agenda.
Dr. Bawumia’s fingerprints are all over the design. During his tenure as Vice President, he was famously meticulous about evidence-based policy, spearheading Ghana’s digital transformation agenda with a rigour that set new standards for public administration. That same disposition, systematic, data, driven, forward-looking, is now being institutionalised in the NPP’s opposition architecture.
Senior party figures interviewed were emphatic about the significance of the moment. “The NPP is redefining what it means to be in opposition in Ghana,” one veteran party official said. “We are not just opposing, we are proposing. Not just criticising, we are constructing.”
For a country whose political culture has often reduced opposition to mere noise-making, the Bawumia policy committees represent a genuine qualitative leap. If the committees deliver on their mandate, the NPP will arrive at the 2028 polls not with promises, but with a programme, detailed, researched, and ready for implementation on day one of a new administration.
Ghana’s political history, it appears, is being rewritten. And the NPP, under Bawumia’s direction, is holding the pen.










