120 Days of John Mahama: A Presidency Under the Microscope
It has been 120 days since President John Dramani Mahama officially took the reins of leadership, and already, the weight of high expectations and sharp scrutiny is shaping public discourse around his young presidency.
When Mahama assumed office, he inherited not just the seat of power but also a nation grappling with energy crises, economic anxiety, and deepening public mistrust in governance. For many Ghanaians, these first four months have served as a litmus test — not for perfection, but for purpose, direction, and decisive action.
President Mahama's initial days have not been entirely devoid of promise. His government has continued existing infrastructural projects, and his communication style has so far reflected a calm, diplomatic tone. The president has maintained Ghana's foreign relations and shown resolve in stabilizing macroeconomic indicators, albeit modestly.
Efforts to streamline public sector wages and clamp down on ghost names in the civil service payroll have also earned his administration some credit. On the education front, Mahama's reaffirmation of the free SHS policy rollout roadmap has reassured many.
But Ghanaians are not only counting promises — they are tallying results. The power crisis, which Mahama promised to tackle head-on, still looms large in many homes and industries. Unemployment remains high, and inflation continues to bite into the pockets of ordinary citizens. The cedi's performance remains shaky, and despite bold talk, corruption still feels like a ghost in the corridors of government.
Critics argue that Mahama's administration has been slow to act on key issues and often defensive when questioned. Others believe his leadership so far reflects continuity more than change — an extension of the previous NDC administration rather than a refreshing chapter.
120 days is not enough to judge a presidency in full, but it's enough to read the signs. President Mahama must now move from measured words to bold, tangible actions. Ghanaians are watching — not with hostility, but with hope. And that hope must not be betrayed by inertia.
If this early phase is a glimpse of what's to come, then the Mahama administration must recalibrate and show a deeper sense of urgency. The people want more than speeches; they want results.
