
Dear President Mahama, this is written with respect, but also with the clarity the moment demands. Complacency is a virus. It starts quietly, it spreads quickly, and it destroys everything a nation hopes for. And right now, it is the one thing you must fight harder than the opposition, harder than economic recovery, and harder than the ghosts of the last administration.
Complacency is the enemy that enters unnoticed, especially when the people have given you a supermajority.
The real risk does not lie in your leadership but in the ecosystem around it. History repeatedly shows that great administrations stumble not because the leader lacked intent, but because the inner circle lacked discipline. Complacency within that space is far more dangerous than complacency at the top. A President may carry vision, yet a careless team can bury it before it takes root. A President may act with sincerity, yet an entourage swollen with ego can suffocate that sincerity before it ever reaches the people.
Do not mistake that supermajority for a blank cheque. Ghanaians did not give you Parliament so that you could relax. They gave it to you so that you could correct the failures that pushed the country to the brink. They gave it to you because the alternative became unbearable. They gave it to you expecting better judgment, not louder partisanship. And that trust can evaporate faster than it formed.
Some of the people around you are egoistic, loud, and disconnected from the truth. Some have mistaken proximity for relevance. Some have confused access with authority. And some are so intoxicated by their new positions that they think the people voted for them, not for the country’s last chance at stability. These individuals do not strengthen your mission. They weaken it. They do not raise your image. They dilute it.
The danger is simple. If complacency sets in, if ego replaces humility, if party loyalty replaces national interest, your government will reproduce the same flaws it came to correct. And Ghana cannot survive another cycle of leadership drifting into arrogance. If, after all these years of the Fourth Republic, we still churn out leaders who are disconnected from reality, then we must admit that the problem is deeper than political parties. It becomes a cultural crisis, a governance crisis, and a crisis of the national conscience.
Mr President, do not let the noise around you drown the signal in front of you. The people are tired, not blind. They want progress, not excuses. They want accountability, not theatrics. Ghana cannot be governed by men who believe politics is performance. We cannot move forward with statesmen who treat truth as an inconvenience. And we cannot build a future where partisan reflex overrides national duty.
Your mandate is not a trophy. It is a responsibility. And responsibilities become heavy when surrounded by individuals who think the people owe them gratitude for simply existing. This is the moment to choose competence over noise, humility over entitlement, and sincerity over showmanship.
Ghana has placed its hope in you again. Do not let complacency turn that hope into regret. The next chapter of this nation requires courage, discipline, and leaders who think beyond their chairs. Because the country is watching. The people are assessing. And history is waiting to write its verdict.
Choose wisely. Lead firmly. And protect the trust Ghanaians have given you.
Kay Codjoe
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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Source: myjoyonline.com


