Politics

EC hasn’t created new constituencies-Bossman Asare

The Electoral Commission (EC) has stated that it has not created new constituencies and does not intend to embark on such exercise as being circulated on social media.

It insisted that no such decision to create 25 more constituencies had been discussed by the election’s management body.

Dr Bossman Eric Asare, the Deputy Chairman in-charge of Corporate Services at the Commission, responding to a message circulating on social media that the Commission had created 25 constituencies in eight regions ahead of the 2024 general election,
indicated that although the EC had the constitutional mandate to review the constituencies after the publication of the census figures, it had not done so.

According to the message titled ‘Breaking News:The Commission had created four constituencies in the Greater Accra, 11 in the Ashanti, one in the Volta, and one in the North East Regions and two of the constituencies had been created in the North, two in the Central, three in the Eastern, and one in the Western regions, in that order.

However, Dr Asare maintained that the creation of the constituencies were governed strictly by the 1992 Constitution and must go through certain processes authorised by Electoral Commission to review division of the country into constituencies at intervals.

He said the intervals must be of not less than seven years, or within twelve months after publication of enumeration figures after holding of census of the population of the country whichever was earlier and may, as a result, alter the constituencies.

“Clause five of article 47 of the 1992 Constitution authorised the Electoral Commission to review the division of Ghana into constituencies at intervals of not less than seven years, or within twelve months after the publication of the enumeration figures after the holding of a census of the population of Ghana, whichever is earlier and may, as a result, alter the constituencies.

“The Electoral Commission in 2012 increased the number of constituencies from 230 to the current 275,” Dr Asare noted. -GNA

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