It’s hopeless expectation when everyone thought the well composed second wife, aspiring to office of First Lady, will first apologize on behalf of her husband, Kennedy Agyapong, a Ghanaian and rasty politician, his several statements that have drawn public criticism for being disrespectful and discriminatory towards women. This shows Christiana Agyepong is not the quiet opposite of her loudmouth husband. No, my people, she’s Kennedy Agyapong in heels and perfume. She’s the same energy, just in a different bottle.
Now she’s touring and talking, trying to convince us that the man who insults everything from pulpits to presidents is really a fine gentleman. Madam, please stop. You can’t baptize thunder and call it rain.
SILENCE IS NOT SUPPORT, IT’S COMPLICITY
But this isn’t just about Kennedy. It’s also about Madam Christiana’s silence, the luxury of pretending not to hear when the man beside you is shouting down a whole nation. For example: The statements against Charlotte Osei, in particular, triggered significant organized backlash from various groups: The National Zongo Magajia Association and other queen mothers held press conferences and organized marches, calling his statements an insult to all women and demanding an apology. Also, many citizens and commentators called on his party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP), and Parliament to sanction him and remove him from his position as a Ranking Member on the Communications Committee, questioning his fitness to hold the title “Honorable”. .Instead he defined a woman’s primary qualification for marriage as being “servants” to a man, emphasizing cooking, reducing women to domestic roles. This also attracted a widespread condemnation from women’s groups who staged protests and demanded an apology.
No one blames a wife for her husband’s madness. But at least, madam, hold a mirror once in a while. When your husband is on TV insulting and calling women names, and roasting critics like kebabs, where were you, Christiana Agyapong?
THE SPOUSE WHO FAILED THE PSYCHOLOGY TEST
If Christiana were a good psychologist or even a wise partner, Ghana wouldn’t be enduring Kennedy’s daily outbursts. Her “spousal influence” has failed national psychology. And now, she wants to sell her free-range barker as Ghana’s next gentleman-in-chief. Ghana deserves leaders with sense and spouses with conscience. Not couples who think loyalty means silence and foolish attacks on women means love.
If Kennedy Agyapong becomes President with Christiana as First Lady, hmm, brace yourself. Baby mamas will multiply like maize at harvest, 160 of them waving flags, 2,200 children forming the next Youth Wing, and 500 wives attending Cabinet meetings. National Security will need a new branch: “Department of Domestic Management and Baby Mama Affairs.”
WHEN MARRIAGE BECOMES NATIONAL CURRICULUM
Marriage may be private, yes. But when your husband’s mouth becomes a public broadcast, your home becomes the nation’s moral classroom. So if Mrs. Agyepong truly believes in decency and leadership, then her silence in the face of her husband’s recklessness is not humility, it’s hypocrisy. Either she’s afraid to speak, or she’s convinced that insults on women is masculinity. Either way, Ghana cannot afford such blindness in Jubilee House.
Kennedy’s behavior from insults to incitement crossed decency long ago. But what makes it worse is the quiet endorsement from the woman who should know better. Silence in the face of covering ups is partnership in disgrace.
GHANA DESERVES BETTER
Let no one say, “It’s their marriage.” Once you ask Ghanaians for their votes, your marriage becomes part of our civic studies. We have the right to ask: what example are you setting? What values are you feeding this nation? Ghanaians are not blind. We see the disrespect, the arrogance, the moral decay and we reject it. Leadership is not a family business; it’s a moral duty. And spouses of public figures must stand for values, not varnish vices.
We will not normalize nonsense.
We will not be indoctrinated like Christiana Agyepong.
Ghana deserves leaders and families that reflect integrity, not drama.
Osɔfo Nii Naate Atswele Agbo Nartey Files: Where the Holy Spirit Meets Hard Truths”

