PPP Is Restrategising To Win 2016 Elections- Eva Lokko

The 2012 vice-presidential candidate of the Progressive People�s Party (PPP), Ms Eva Lokko, has stated that the party is not dormant but restrategising to win the 2016 elections. �People think we are quiet. We are not quiet. We are building from the ground up and we are strengthening our legs and arms in the right way. PPP is getting ready to win the 2016 elections,� she pointed out. She said the party is still in politics, adding that the party could not win the 2012 elections because it did not have ample time to campaign. Speaking on an Accra FM,Station Ms Lokko said she is optimistic the party will win the 2016 elections since there are no internal wranglings. She said though the PPP is �doing a lot of things� on the ground, its efforts are still not recognised and appreciated. �Sometimes people say we can�t hear the PPP but we are doing a lot of things. We are doing a lot of practical things,� Ms Lokko said. She also revealed that her political ambition is still with the PPP, saying: �My political ambition is still with the PPP and we have our rules and regulations and therefore I will be right in there if along the way, I�m asked to take any position or I feel strongly about any kind of position, I just have to follow the procedures.� The party, in the 2012 elections polled 182,649 votes, representing 1.65 per cent, dashing its dreams of winning the 2012 elections. The party has since been criticised and deemed unprepared to win subsequent elections. The leader and founder of the party, Dr Paa Kwesi Nduom, in May this year, stated that Ghanaians should blame themselves for the current economic hardships because they failed to vote for the PPP. �You get what you vote for; you cannot vote for paper and expect to get gold! Never! �This should be a big lesson for you all,� he said, adding: �It is about time we told Ghanaians the truth � that what they planted in 2012 is what they are reaping. I am not insulting Ghanaians, but that is the truth,� Dr Nduom stated at the second anniversary of the party �to take stock� of what had gone wrong in the 2012 general elections.