Koku Anyidoho, the founder and president of the MILLS Institute, has said that he is still an official member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), which is in power.
He maintains that he hasn’t been officially kicked out of the party or suspended.
Mr. Anyidoho stressed that he still identifies with the NDC and has friendly relationships with its members. He further stated that he is always willing to interact with anyone who contacts him.
“Contrary to some opinions, I am still in the NDC; I have a membership card. Somebody said so (that I was suspended) without any documentary evidence. That is politics,” he said.
“People don’t even know that last year I went to the Flagstaff House. Because I am working with the Christian Council, and we had to go to the Flagstaff House, and nobody stopped me from entering,” he added in an interview with Channel One TV.
He added that he maintains friendships with prominent members of both the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the NDC, demonstrating his belief in cross-party political communication and interpersonal connections.
“On the same ticket, we went to Dr Bawumia (NPP’S 2028 flagbearer), Thanksgiving service, which they want to do propaganda with,” he noted.
“I will associate with everybody, I will associate with Dr Bawumia, I will associate with Nana Addo, I will associate with Gabby Otchere Darko and anybody who gives me the door, I will associate.”
Mr Anyidoho, who previously served as Director of Communications and later as Deputy General Secretary of the NDC, as well as a close aide to the late President John Evans Atta Mills, has been perceived by some observers as politically marginalized within the party in recent years, following the former president’s death.
However, he claimed that such impressions do not reflect his current situation, maintaining that he is still on good terms with the NDC and continues to support the party’s greater principles.
Source:Mybrytfmonline.com/Joseph Asare








































