Dear Hon. Haruna Mohammed,
Leadership, they say, is best demonstrated not in speeches, but in action. And as a newly elected Member of Parliament riding on the back of grand promises, the people of Asunafo North are still waiting to see the change you so boldly declared during your campaign.
It has been six months since you were entrusted with the mandate to represent the people in Parliament, and so far, the only visible energy from your end has been on media platforms—loud on radio, strong in interviews, yet completely silent in the very place where your voice matters most: Parliament.
Your constituents did not elect a media commentator. They elected a Member of Parliament—a legislator expected to speak truth to power, table developmental concerns, lobby for projects, and articulate the challenges of Asunafo North on the floor of Parliament. Sadly, six months in, not a single significant submission, not a question raised, not even a simple motion has come from your end.
Even more worrying is that your most notable appearance in Parliament so far was during a physical altercation at a ministerial vetting—an act that brought embarrassment but no benefit to the people who sent you there.
When the Hon. Minister for Roads and Highways visited the region, it was an opportunity for any serious MP to demand attention for our poor road infrastructure. But where were you? Silent. Absent in purpose. This is not the bold and visionary leadership you promised. This is not what Asunafo North voted for.
Your duty as a Member of Parliament is clear:
To be a voice for your people in Parliament—not only in the studios of Accra. To learn, grow, and contribute meaningfully to legislative work—not to chase microphones and headlines. To advocate, lobby, and bring development—not to shadow-box the government with no clear strategy.
The people of Asunafo North are not blind. They are watching, and their expectations are clear: they want a working MP, not a talking one.
So I ask: What exactly have you done for Asunafo North in six months? Where are the initiatives? Where is the advocacy? Where is the leadership?
Hon. Haruna Mohammed, the campaign is over. It is time to deliver.
Best regards
Nana Moses