In public life, power is never neutral. It is weighted with expectations, obligations, and moral consequences. The trappings of high office—convoys, titles, residences, diplomatic privileges—are often visible to the public.
What is less visible, yet far more consequential, is the moral weight of ethical responsibility that accompanies those privileges. By laying out a clear code of ethics for his appointees, President Mahama has underscored his commitment to setting a new standard in governance—one devoid of cover-ups.
This renewed emphasis on accountability has recently found expression in his decision to recall Ghana’s Ambassador to Nigeria, Mohammed Baba Jamal Ahmed, following allegations of open inducement during the NDC’s internal selection process for the Ayawaso East by-election.
Reports indicate that television sets, boiled eggs, motorbikes, and other material inducements were distributed to delegates. The President himself acknowledged that such practices were not isolated, and that multiple candidates engaged in similar conduct.
Yet only one individual has borne the immediate consequences: the ambassador. To some, this may appear selective. To others, it is a lesson in the hierarchy of responsibility; and that is exactly how it is in reference to the latter.
The Moral Burden of Public Office
In every functioning democracy, there exists a distinction between ordinary political actors and those entrusted with state authority. A public officer does not merely participate in politics; he represents the President and the state. His conduct, therefore, is not judged by the loose standards of partisan competition, but by the stricter code of national service.
An ambassador, in particular, is the face of a nation abroad. He carries not only the flag but also the moral credibility of the government he serves. His words, gestures, and decisions reflect directly on the presidency and, by extension, on the republic itself.
When such a figure descends into practices widely perceived as unethical—even if common within political contests—the damage is not confined to a constituency or a party. It reverberates across the entire architecture of governance.
The President’s code of conduct is therefore not a ceremonial document. It is a moral contract between the state and its servants. It demands that those who occupy the upper rungs of public authority rise above the ordinary temptations of political life.
Equality of Guilt, Inequality of Responsibility
The President’s admission that all candidates engaged in inducement introduces an uncomfortable but important truth: political culture is often broader than individual misconduct. Yet ethics is not merely about equal guilt; it is about unequal responsibility.
In moral philosophy, there is a long-standing principle: the higher one climbs, the narrower the margin for error. A public officer is expected to exhibit restraint precisely because he enjoys privileges denied to ordinary participants.
An ambassador has access to the resources, prestige, and authority of the state. With such advantages comes an obligation to behave with greater discipline. When he fails, the breach is not just personal—it is institutional.
The recall of Ambassador Baba Jamal, therefore, is not simply a punitive measure. It is a symbolic act—one that reasserts the principle that public office is a moral trust, not a partisan entitlement. It also serves as a clear lesson to his colleagues to abide strictly by the rules of engagement
The Pain That Comes with Principle
Ethical decisions are rarely painless. They often come with political costs, internal dissent, and accusations of selectivity or harshness. In party structures where certain practices have become normalized, enforcing discipline can appear disruptive or even unjust. But leadership is measured not by comfort, but by conviction.
President Mahama returned to office with a promise to challenge entrenched practices and restore a measure of ethical clarity to public administration. Such promises are easy to articulate in opposition; they are far more difficult to implement in power.
By recalling an ambassador from his own political family, the President has signaled that ethical codes are not ornamental. They are enforceable. And enforcement, by its nature, carries consequences.
The pain is personal for the individual involved. It is also political for the administration. But it is precisely this willingness to bear the cost of principle that gives ethical governance its credibility.
The Symbolism of Restraint
There is a deeper lesson embedded in this episode. In many political cultures, the prestige of office is measured by its privileges. In more mature democracies, however, prestige is measured by restraint.
The true mark of high office is not what one can take, but what one refuses to take. Not the favors one distributes, but the temptations one resists. Public servants are not merely administrators of policy. They are custodians, for example. Their conduct shapes the moral expectations of the entire political system.
When a public officer violates that expectation, the correction must be visible and decisive. Otherwise, codes of conduct become decorative texts—quoted in speeches, ignored in practice.
Walking the Talk
For decades, Ghanaian politics has wrestled with the normalization of inducements, patronage, and transactional loyalty. Many administrations have promised reform; few have demonstrated it through painful decisions.
President Mahama’s recall of his ambassador suggests an attempt to break that pattern. It may not cure the broader culture overnight, but it establishes a principle: that public office is not a shield against accountability, but a reason for it.
In doing so, the President is not merely enforcing a code. He is shaping precedent. And precedents, once established, have a way of outliving administrations.
The Lesson
The story of Ambassador Baba Jamal is not simply about one man’s fall from diplomatic grace. It is a reminder that the higher the office, the heavier the moral burden. Public authority is not just about power. It is about discipline. Not just about loyalty, but about examples. Not just about winning contests, but about preserving the integrity of the state.
If the President continues to match his promises with actions—however painful—the country may yet rediscover a simple but powerful truth: That the real privilege of public office is not its comfort, but its responsibility. And that the truest mark of leadership is the courage to enforce ethics, even when it hurts.
By Richmond Keelson
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