Mawuse Dake

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J. Mawuse Dake
Mawuse Ðake
Secretary for Works and Housing
In office
January 1982 – 1983[1]
PresidentJerry Rawlings
Preceded byDavid Zanlerigu
Succeeded byKofi Sam
Personal details
Died13 April 2000 (age 63 years)
CitizenshipGhanaian
Political partyConvention People's Party
Other political
affiliations
Social Democratic Front
Occupationlecturer

Mawuse Dake was a Ghanaian politician and academic.

Politics[edit]

Dake was the running mate for the presidential bid of Ibrahim Mahama for the Social Democratic Front in the 1979 Ghanaian general election.[2] They won 3.72% of the vote, coming fifth.[3]

He left for Kenya where he worked as a consultant for some years.[2]

Following the coup d'état on 31 December 1981, Dake was appointed Secretary for Works and Housing in the Provisional National Defence Council military government led by Jerry Rawlings.[4][5] In 1983, he was made the Secretary to the National Defence Committee.[6]

In 1992, when the ban on party politics was lifted, he became one of the founding members of the People's Heritage Party (PHP) whose leader was Emmanuel Erskine. He is reported to have been influential in the merger between the PHP and the National Independence Party (NIP) led by Kwabena Darko to form the People's Convention Party (PCP). He is reported to have been against the alliance formed between the New Patriotic Party and the PCP called the Great Alliance to fight the 1996 Ghanaian general election. He is also reported to have been influential in the PCP and the National Convention Party (NCP) merging to reform the Convention People's Party.[2]

Sports[edit]

Dake was keen on football and was Chairman of Voradep Football Club as well as a Director of Accra Great Olympics F.C.[2]

Publications[edit]

  • Dake, J. Mawuse (1994). Lamentations of a Patriot: A Political Indictment of J.J. Concerned Citizens Platform for The Conscience of the Nation.[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "More changes announced". Ghana News. 12 (3). Washington DC: Embassy of Ghana: 3. 1979. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d "Mawuse Dake is dead". Modern Ghana. 14 April 2000. Retrieved 19 December 2021.
  3. ^ Nohlen, D; Thibaut, B (1999). Elections in Africa : a data handbook. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-829645-2.
  4. ^ "Civilians appointed to fill cabinet posts". Ghana News. 11 (1). Washington DC: Embassy of Ghana: 3. January 1982.
  5. ^ "PNDC will provide houses for all". Ghana News. 11 (6). Washington DC: Embassy of Ghana: 8. June 1982.
  6. ^ "PNDC makes 6 cabinet changes". Ghana News. 12 (6). Washington DC: Embassy of Ghana: 6. June 1983.
  7. ^ Dake, J. Mawuse (1994). Lamentations of a patriot: a political indictment of J.J. Concerned Citizens Platform for the Conscience of the Nation. OCLC 34172567. Retrieved 19 December 2021 – via worldcat.org.