“Remember Me on Saturday to Bring the NPP Back Home” –Ing. Kwabena Agyepong Pitches Vision to Delegates
Flagbearer hopeful Ing. KwabenaAgyepong urges unity, warns party risks prolonged opposition without the right choice on January 31

- Ing. Kwabena Agyepong is concluding his Ashanti Region mop-up campaign
- Ing. Agyepong emphasized that unity is the foundation of the NPP
- described himself as the hope and future of the NPP
New Patriotic Party (NPP) 2028 Presidential Candidate hopeful Ing. Kwabena Agyei Agyepong has urged to remember him at the ballot on Saturday, January 31, 2026, saying his leadership offers the surest path to unity and a return to power.
Ing. Kwabena Agyepong made the appeal while addressing delegates at Agona in the Ashanti Region on Tuesday, January 27, 2026, during a mop-up campaign exercise ahead of the NPP presidential primaries.

“Remember me on Saturday to bring the party to where it belongs,” he told delegates, stressing that the NPP stands at a defining moment in its history.
He added that he represents the hope and future of the party, capable of rebuilding trust, unity, and electoral strength.

He described himself as a natural unifier, noting that although he has not yet been elected flagbearer, he already commands strong support among polling station executives and grassroots party members nationwide—support he says is rooted in years of sacrifice and loyalty.
Ing. Kwabena Agyepong emphasized that unity is the foundation of the NPP, warning that internal divisions could have serious consequences. He cautioned that the party risks remaining in opposition for as long as 12 years if delegates elect the wrong candidate.
Highlighting his personal record, Ing. Kwabena Agyepong pointed out that he is the only one among the five presidential aspirants who did not receive a ministerial appointment under former President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, a distinction he said reflects independence, humility, and commitment to party service rather than personal gain.

“I have never spoken evil against anyone,” he said, adding that while he believes in discipline and accountability, correction must be done with love and purpose. “If you go astray, I will correct you—but not destroy you,” he noted, reinforcing his message of unity.
Beyond the primaries, Ing. Kwabena Agyepong outlined a vision anchored in ethical leadership, inclusiveness, and national renewal, supported by policies focused on land reform and modernised agriculture, fiscal discipline, meritocracy in public service, fair formalisation of trade, urban and rural renewal, environmental protection, and the empowerment of the creative arts and sports sectors.
He urged delegates to choose unity over division, reminding them that if they truly want a leader who can unify the party and reposition it for victory, then his name number five on the ballot paper should be their choice.
As the January 31 primaries draw closer, Ing. Kwabena Agyepong’s message from Agona is clear: he believes he is the hope and future of the NPP and the leader to take the party back to where it belongs.



