
More than 6,000 eligible voters are expected to cast their ballots today, Friday, July 11, 2025, in a high-stakes parliamentary rerun across 19 polling stations in the Ablekuma North Constituency.
The vote is meant to end months of political and legal wrangling and restore parliamentary representation to a constituency left in limbo since December 2024.
The standoff began after the December 7 general elections when the results from 62 polling stations became the subject of fierce contention between the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC), with both parties disputing the authenticity of pink sheets and the legitimacy of the collation process.

The Electoral Commission (EC) managed to collate results from 59 polling stations, leaving three outstanding and sparking legal action.
In January 2025, the High Court ordered the EC to complete the collation and declare the results.
But the Commission, citing irregularities and missing endorsements in 19 of the polling stations, made a surprise announcement: a rerun would be held instead. That decision deepened tensions.

The NPP rejected the EC’s move, arguing that its candidate, Nana Akua Owusu Afriyie, had already secured victory with a 414-vote lead.
The party sought an injunction to block the rerun, but on July 9, the court threw out the case as “unmeritorious.”

Despite the party’s official boycott, Akua Afriyie broke ranks, declaring she would participate in the rerun. “I am contesting. We are fully prepared. We are going for this contest,” she said on July 10.
Her defiance drew support from local NPP executives, past and present Members of Parliament, and grassroots campaigners who rallied around her in the final hours before the polls.
Meanwhile, the NDC, confident in its candidate Ewurabena Aubynn’s chances, has doubled down on its campaign efforts.
The party insists Aubynn won the original vote and has mounted a strong ground game ahead of the rerun.

“The people of Ablekuma North are ready for change, and Ewurabena Aubynn represents that change,” said Greater Accra Regional Director of Elections Joshua Alabi during a final campaign stop.