Hon Kennedy Agyepong is acting strange in Dambai. He hasn’t traveled extensively in Ghana, else he would not be a stranger to this terrain. His reactions show unfamiliarity, not authority, and the excessive talking feels like political anxiety, not leadership. Over-talking can be a form of desperation, especially when a political figure like him is trying to reclaim attention, relevance, or momentum.
Why is Kennedy Agyapong behaving like a stranger in Jerusalem? It’s obvious this is his first real expedition on the Oti and Volta Rivers and in Dambai. These sudden, inflated ambitions should not distract anyone. And what exactly does he know about broken promises? His “much ado about nothing” record in Assin Central after 24 years speaks for itself. Basically, he looked completely out of place and unfamiliar with the political terrain in all the regions he visited during this campaign especially on matters like the River Oti and Volta. And honestly, his remarks and posture after these visits suggested that these were new grounds for him, not something he has mastered or understood deeply.
Instead of the emotional theatrics and loud declarations, what we’re seeing feels more like political overcompensation, talking plenty to cover gaps in strategy, facts, or preparation. When a politician steps into an area they haven’t studied or experienced, the result is often exactly this:
loud confidence masking thin expertise
Kennedy Agyapong’s sudden interest in the Oti River looks like his first expedition, and it shows. Instead of demonstrating mastery, he’s projecting noise. The over-talking, the scattered jabs, and the constant chest-thumping feel less like confidence and more like political restlessness. He’s not standing on solid ground he’s scrambling for relevance.
His recent posture after Dambai, looks inconsistent, unsettled, and driven by political frustration, leading to excessive talking that feels more like desperation than conviction.
Osɔfo Nii Naate Atswele Agbo Nartey

