Professor Stephen Kwaku Asare, a legal scholar and Fellow at the Ghana Center for Democratic Development, has described President John Dramani Mahama’s New Year address as a governing statement rather than a campaign-style speech.
According to the GOGO advocate, the President’s address sought to steady the political climate, assert early economic credibility, and reset national priorities around unity, accountability, and shared responsibility.
In an analysis of the address, Professor Asare said the President appeared focused on stabilizing the political moment after what he called a difficult inheritance, while deliberately re anchoring public discourse away from partisan contestation and toward collective ownership of reform.
According to him, the tone and content of the address signal an attempt to govern beyond electoral victory and to frame the Reset Agenda as a national project.
“Three themes stand out clearly. The insistence on one Ghana, the framing of corruption as a moral and fiduciary failure, and the deliberate appeal to actors beyond government.”
Professor Stephen Kwaku Asare, CDD-Ghana Fellow
Civic Charge Most Consequential
Professor Asare argued that the most consequential line in the address was civic rather than economic. He pointed to the President’s declaration that there is no NPP Ghana, no CPP Ghana or NDC Ghana, only one Ghana.

In his view, this statement represents an effort to elevate unity from a campaign slogan into a principle that shapes how power is exercised.
He noted that the President was not suggesting the elimination of disagreement, but rather warning against disagreement hardening into permanent political hostility.
He observed that this is an ambitious position in a political environment where party affiliation often influences access to opportunity, appointments, contracts and social standing.
In such a context, he said, polarization is not simply emotional but rational, as many citizens perceive their economic security to be closely tied to political alignment. This reality, he argued, makes calls for unity both necessary and difficult to implement.
According to Professor Asare, governing through inclusion in a polarized system requires discipline, restraint and credible signals that state resources, justice and opportunity will not be distributed along partisan lines.
“Without that credibility, appeals to unity risk being interpreted as moral appeals unsupported by institutional behavior. The speech therefore sets a high bar.
“Unity here is not simply about tone. It is about how power is exercised, how appointments are made, how investigations are pursued, and how dissent is treated.”
Professor Stephen Kwaku Asare, CDD-Ghana Fellow
Corruption’s Shift
On corruption, Professor Asare noted that the President’s language marked a significant shift in framing. By stating that every cedi belongs to the people and must be accounted for, the address positioned the state as a fiduciary of public resources rather than a dispenser of patronage.

He said this framing treats corruption not only as inefficiency or illegality, but as a violation of public trust. He added that the emphasis on having no sacred cows implicitly rejects selective accountability and signals an intention to move the anti-corruption conversation away from partisan point scoring toward principled enforcement.
At the same time, he cautioned that such framing invites heightened scrutiny. Once corruption is cast as a moral breach, tolerance for inconsistency diminishes, and civil society, the media, and citizens are justified in demanding that investigations and recoveries follow evidence rather than political affiliation.
In this sense, Professor Asare argued, the address does not ask the public for patience but for vigilance. The President’s words, he said, create expectations that must be matched by consistent institutional conduct if trust is to be sustained.
Shared Responsibility
A further strength of the address, in his view, lies in its insistence that government alone cannot build the nation. Responsibility is deliberately distributed across society, with different groups assigned clear roles in the national project. Young people are challenged not merely to hope for the future but to lead, innovate, and create.
Business leaders are promised a stable environment, but are also urged to invest and generate employment. Civil society and the media are encouraged to hold government accountable, even when such scrutiny is uncomfortable.

Traditional authorities and faith based institutions are called upon to sustain social cohesion and moral order, while public servants are reminded that integrity is demonstrated through daily conduct rather than occasional declarations.
The diaspora is framed as a strategic partner whose skills, resources, and networks are essential to national development, rather than as distant observers of domestic affairs.
“This framing reinforces the central idea that the Reset Agenda is not a partisan project. It is presented as a national undertaking that succeeds or fails based on collective conduct.”
Professor Stephen Kwaku Asare, CDD-Ghana Fellow
Economic Stabilization and Credibility
Economically, the address adopts what Professor Asare described as a narrative of stabilization and credibility rather than dramatic promise-making. Inflation control, currency stability, debt restructuring and restored confidence are presented as foundations rather than final achievements.
The emphasis, he noted, is on building institutions capable of converting recovery into durable opportunity through investments in education, healthcare, agriculture, energy, housing and environmental sustainability.

He concluded that the address should be read as an invitation. An invitation to unity in a system that often rewards division, to accountability in a culture accustomed to selective enforcement, and to shared responsibility in a political tradition that frequently centralizes both blame and credit.
Whether this vision takes hold, he said, will depend less on the eloquence of the speech and more on whether institutional behavior aligns with its claims. Unity as a governing principle, he argued, is not achieved by proclamation but earned through consistent practice.
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