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This is a list of the 276 constituencies in Ghana. They will be contested in the Parliament of the Republic of Ghana, from December 2024. There were 275 constituencies at the time of the 2020 Ghanaian general election. [1] One more constituency, Guan, was added in 2023 and was contested for the first time in the 2024 Ghanaian general election.
There are a total of 276 constituencies in Ghana. The 9th Parliament is set to convene on 7 January 2025 to elect a Speaker and Deputy Speakers as well as for the administration of oaths to the Speaker and Members of Parliament. One new constituency, Guan was contested for the first time in this parliament. [3]
There are a total of 275 constituencies in Ghana. The 8th Parliament convened on 7 January 2021 to elect a Speaker and Deputy Speakers as well as for the administration of oaths to the Speaker and Members of Parliament. Results of the 2020 Ghanaian parliamentary election by constituency
List of parliamentary constituencies of Ghana This page was last edited on 29 September 2019, at 19:37 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Map of Ghana's parliamentary constituencies as per MP's party affiliation as at 2008. NB: Where constituencies are too small to be shown (i.e. Accra and Tamale Metropolitan Areas) the majority party elected in the district is shown.
Constituency Outgoing MP Parliamentary candidate; 1 Suame Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu John Darko 2 Bekwai Joe Osei Owusu Ralph Poku-Adusei 3 Oforikrom Emmanuel Marfo Michael Kwesi Aidoo 4 Abuakwa South Samuel Atta Akyea Kinsley Agyeman 5 Okere Dan Botwe Daniel Nana Addo Kenneth 6 Essikado Ketan Joe Ghartey Charles Bissue 7 Assin Central Kennedy Agyapong
Ada (Ghana parliament constituency) Adenta (Ghana parliament constituency) Amasaman (Ghana parliament constituency) Anyaa-Sowutuom (Ghana parliamentary constituency) Ashaiman (Ghana parliament constituency) Ayawaso Central; Ayawaso East; Ayawaso North (Ghana parliament constituency) Ayawaso West
Ahead of Ghana becoming a republic, the first presidential election was held on 27 April 1960. Nkrumah won 89 per cent of the vote and was subsequently declared President for life. [10] [16] In the 1965 Ghanaian parliamentary election, all the CPP candidates were elected unopposed due to the one-party state system in place at the time. [17]