News — Presidential

Feature News: Ghana’s President Akufo-Addo Re-Elected To A Second Term
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo of Ghana will have a second four-year term after the country’s electoral commissioner declared on Wednesday that the 76-year-old had won the December 7 presidential polls.
The president beat the challenge from 11 other presidential candidates among whom included John Dramani Mahama, the man Akufo-Addo succeeded in 2017. Mahama, 62, is yet to concede defeat although the majority of the other contestants have already called to congratulate the president-elect.
Akufo-Addo won 51.59% of the over 13 million votes cast. His closest challenger, Mahama, polled 47.3%. Ghana’s presidential elections are won by the candidate with more than 50% of the valid votes.
The Ghanaian leader will be sworn into his second term on January 7, 2021. Not much is expected to change in Akufo-Addo’s second term but it is certain that he will not count on a lot of help from his party in parliament.
A 46-parliamentary seat lead his New Patriotic Party (NPP) won in 2016 has been cut to naught. Depending on the results of currently contested local government (constituency) elections, the NPP may turn out to be the minority in Ghana’s parliament.
Akufo-Addo has presided over macroeconomic growth that has seen Ghana praised by international development partners. His first term also saw the introduction of free senior high school education in Ghana.
However, the former lawyer has also been accused of doing very little to fight corruption among his appointees. He has also been criticized for appointing close family relatives to top government positions.

Feature News: Former Presidential Candidate Kanye West Sued For $1 Million In Unpaid Wages
Kanye West has been sued in a class-action lawsuit for unpaid wages connected to his Nebuchadnezzar Live opera. The failed presidential aspirant was sued by a group of workers who helped with his live musical production called the Hollywood Bowl.
The rapper, who is believed to be a billionaire, is accused of owing “unpaid wages” and failing to pay minimum wage and overtime when he hosted the Hollywood Bowl in 2019. He premiered the opera in December last year, after releasing his debut gospel album, ‘Jesus Is King’.
Legal documents obtained by Complex said the plaintiffs, including background actors and hairstylists, alleged they were not properly compensated for their production work. A hairstylist revealed that she was supposed to be paid $550 for two days of work but received $530 after four months and was charged $20 for a wire fee in violation of California‘s labor code.
The lawsuit also states that organizers “failed to properly compensate the hair assistant and many dozens of other persons who performed services on the production, including the background actors performing as audience members”.
“The defendants oversaw, controlled and ran the production, and the aggrieved employees worked many hours on the production and were not timely paid for their work, or paid at all,” the suit read.
“In addition, Defendants misclassified Plaintiffs and Aggrieved Employees as independent contractors as no deductions were made for payroll taxes.”
The suit was reportedly filed in July and the plaintiffs have been seeking “unpaid wages, continuing wages, damages, civil penalties, statutory penalties, and attorneys’ fees and costs.” Live Nation, the company behind the production, has also been listed as a defendant.
West, known for controversies, has been mooting several propositions apart from his recent presidential run. Recently, he revealed his plan to build a ‘city of the future’ on an island in Haiti.
Touching on the subject during an interview on the Joe Rogan Experience podcast in October, the 43-year-old explained how the project would benefit locals on the island.
“We go to Haiti and the president gives us this island to develop; to make it a city of the future,” Kanye said. “We’re gonna have the farmers and the people that live there take ownership of the land they have right now so when it raises in value, they all eat.”
West’s announcement of the partnership with Haitian president Jovenel Moïse and his government, however, did not sit down well with some people on social media, prompting him to clarify the details of the agreement on his Twitter page on October 27, GQ reports.
“Just to be CLEAR: WE ARE IN ENGAGED WITH HAITI’s GOVERNMENT to make a transformational INVESTMENT to bring JOBS, DEVELOPMENT, HELP SUPPORT LOCAL FARMERS and FISHERMEN and Build a new « CITY OF THE FUTURE » in a very beautiful country,” he tweeted