Johnson Asiedu Nketiah is a political strategist whose brilliance I must sincerely acknowledge. I admit that I was not always a fan, but over the years, my admiration for him has grown profoundly. His witty, often jocular, yet deeply insightful responses to complex political questions reveal a rare intellectual craftsmanship. He deploys anecdotes, sarcasm and even allegory with a skill that should be studied in our institutions of higher learning.
This reflection is simply an acknowledgement of Asiedu Nketiah’s remarkable service and political craftsmanship over the years. His long-standing commitment to party organisation, grassroots mobilisation and principled leadership continues to shape the NDC’s identity and strength.
Long before today, anyone paying close attention would recognise that if there is a single politician in Ghana who has organically built a loyal constituency stretching from the Volta Region through Oti to the northern belts, it is Johnson Asiedu Nketiah. His influence is not manufactured. It is lived, relational, and grounded in genuine human connections. This is a man who pays casual, unannounced visits to his numerous friends and political associates, and when he does, he does not seek luxury. He stays in the homes of ordinary people who host him with pride. His politics is not performed. It is lived.
He is the kind of general who leads his people into battle, not from behind but from the very front. He does not desert his flanks. He protects the interests of those who follow him, and they, in turn, follow him with unshaken loyalty. That is the kind of leader ordinary people are willing to fight for, even at great personal cost.
One may be the most loyal and serviceable servant to a political master, but greatness is not determined by the affection of the powerful. It is determined by the filial connection with the common man, the person selling fish at Nkrankwanta, the young man farming in Kete Krachi, the grandmother weaving baskets in Kpassa. Those bonds cannot be bought or fabricated. They are earned. And Asiedu Nketiah has earned them.
His presence permeates every nook and cranny. In the Volta Region, the historic “world bank” of the NDC, I can say with certainty that in any internal election today he would not lose a single constituency. Oti, considered the younger sibling of Volta, remains another stronghold of his influence. His political reach is not accidental. It is the result of decades of relational investment.
And anyone who has ever run a race knows a simple truth: when someone has a solid head start, catching up requires twice the exertion. It is hard work. It is devotion. It is relentless consistency. That is the source of his stature in the party he has served with distinction for decades.
In acknowledging Asiedu Nketiah, one is not dabbling in internal party permutations. One is simply recognising a statesman whose footprint in contemporary Ghanaian politics is undeniable.
