Parliamentary Primaries After Democratic Transitions: Explaining Reforms To Candidate Selection In Ghana
Date
2022
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Affairs
Abstract
Candidate selection procedures play a crucial role in shaping parliaments
and influencing the quality of democracy. Yet, our understanding of what
motivates parties to reform candidate selection mechanisms at specific
points in time is limited. To address this gap, we examine the experience of Ghana’s National Democratic Congress (NDC), which reformed
its selection procedures in 2015, allowing all party members to vote in primary elections for parliamentary candidates. We ask what triggered these
reforms and identify four motivations—the confluence of which explains
why the reforms were adopted in 2015. These motivations were: making
the party more democratic by expanding participation and reducing the cost
of the primary process, building the party’s organizational capacity, and
keeping up with the party’s main competitor. Together, these led NDC
leaders to believe that reforms would benefit the party. However, a divergence between actual and intended effects meant some of these benefits
were not realized, so the NDC reversed its reforms. This case suggests
that the current shift towards more inclusive candidate selection mechanisms across parts of Africa will not be linear. party leaders will adopt
such reforms when they believe it is in their party’s interest.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Reforms, Ghana, Parliamentary primaries