I must confess — I initially had my doubts about the Bryan Acheampong project. Like many political watchers, I said openly, on several platforms, that Bryan’s entry into the NPP flagbearer race was just to “test the waters.” After all, Ghanaian politics has seen its fair share of exploratory ambitions that evaporate as quickly as they appear.
But I had to eat my words.From the moment Bryan assembled his exploratory team to the current momentum of his campaign, it’s clear that this is no rehearsal. What began quietly has transformed into a formidable movement that’s unsettling the established order — particularly those in the Bawumia camp, who, judging by their recent theatrics, are not taking it well at all.
The Fertilizer Fairy Tale
The first sign of panic came in the form of a bizarre allegation — that Bryan, as Minister for Agriculture, hoarded fertilizer to sabotage Dr. Bawumia’s 2024 campaign.Preposterous! How could someone allegedly sabotage a campaign he was reportedly heavily financing?
It was political comedy at its best, a desperate attempt to throw mud in the hope that something, anything, might stick. But when the facts didn’t fit the fiction, the narrative conveniently shifted. Goalposts were moved, fingers pointed elsewhere, and the spin machine went into overdrive.
The Press Conference Spectacle
Then came the latest episode: a press conference organized by a group of self-styled “Bawumia campaign organizers” who seemed visibly dazed by Bryan’s growing support base — particularly his massive endorsements in the Ashanti Region, the NPP’s traditional stronghold.
According to one gentleman, who claimed to speak for the Bawumia team, they had “evidence” that over 1.6 million SSNIT contributors voted against the NPP because of Bryan Acheampong’s supposed interest in acquiring the SSNIT Hotels.
Yes, you read that right. The logic, if it can be called that, is that one man’s business interest caused 1.6 million voters to reject the NPP — a stretch so wide it would put the Akosombo Bridge to shame.
The “Power” Quote Revisited
And if that wasn’t enough, they resurrected Bryan’s much-discussed 2024 campaign remark: “We will not hand over power to an NDC government.”
According to the Bawumia camp, this single statement was “reckless, dangerous, and undemocratic” and supposedly responsible for the NPP’s electoral woes. The irony? These are the same individuals who once celebrated the quote when it was politically convenient, only to now weaponize it when the tide has turned.
The Real Fear
Behind all the noise, one thing is clear; Bryan Acheampong’s rise has rattled the status quo. His organizational skills, financial muscle, and growing grassroots appeal have thrown the Bawumia machinery off balance.
What we’re witnessing is not strategy, but sheer desperation — a campaign gasping for control in the face of a challenger who seems unstoppable. The mudslinging, press conferences, and shifting accusations are all symptoms of a political establishment running out of ideas.
The New Narrative — When Being Rich Becomes a Crime
Lately, the attacks have taken a more curious turn. Critics now whisper that Bryan’s success and wealth make him “too powerful” and “too comfortable” to lead. Apparently, in their political theology, success is a sin and achievement is arrogance.
It’s a strange doctrine,one that glorifies poverty while demonizing prosperity. You’d think they were running a monastery, not a modern political movement.
They say they have “ideas,” as though ideas feed themselves, fund themselves, and implement themselves. But let’s be honest, it takes more than “bright ideas” to build nations. It takes execution, discipline, and yes, resources.
If mere ideas could transform countries, Ghana would have been a superpower by now. We have never lacked ideas; we’ve lacked the will and the means to make them work.That is the difference Bryan Acheampong represents the bridge between vision and capacity, between talk and delivery.
And perhaps that is what unsettles his opponents the most. Because when a man has both the ideas and the means to act, those who survive only on slogans begin to panic.
It is almost amusing to hear some in the Bawumia camp preach about “ideas over riches,” as if poverty were the hallmark of patriotism. These same people depend on the wealth of others to finance their campaigns, yet they condemn the very engine that keeps their politics alive.
They speak of “pure intentions” while riding on sponsored platforms, waving donor-funded flags, and calling it humility. Meanwhile, Bryan’s independence — his ability to stand on his own two feet — is what truly terrifies them.
Because the truth is simple: ideas without means are hallucinations.And when those who have neither ideas nor means begin to attack those who have both, you know the campaign has run out of fuel.
Conclusion: Desperation in Broad Daylight
The Bawumia campaign’s recent behavior reflects more fear than foresight. The fertilizer stories, the SSNIT conspiracies, and the selective outrage over Bryan’s words all point to a movement losing control of its own narrative.
What began as quiet envy has now matured into open panic. The attempt to make wealth look like a weakness is the clearest admission that they have no real argument left.
In truth, it is not Bryan Acheampong’s money they fear — it is his momentum. Not his riches — but his reach.The Bawumia camp may shout about “ideas,” but Ghana has heard enough slogans. It’s time for competence, confidence, and capacity. And that combination, it seems, now belongs elsewhere.
Indeed, there is desperation in the air and it’s not coming from Bryan Acheampong’s camp.
SOURCE: Myrepubliconline.com/Samuel Frempong
Sam Frempong is a journalist, editor of The Republic Press, and a political commentator.tenkorang79@gmail.com