Entertainment
The Exposé that Redefined the Creative Vote: Inside Kojo Preko Dankwa’s Deep Dive into the Creative Arts Agency
For years, Ghana’s creative sector occupied a paradoxical space celebrated rhetorically by politicians yet structurally neglected in practice. Despite campaign promises, policy declarations, and public endorsements, many creatives experienced weak institutional support, unclear funding pathways, poor stakeholder engagement, and limited accountability within the Creative Arts Agency (CAA).
By the later years of the NPP administration, dissatisfaction had quietly hardened into distrust. What was missing was a credible, organised, and persistent voice capable of articulating the sector’s grievances in a way that could not be ignored.
That voice emerged forcefully in Kojo Preko Dankwa, President of the Foundation of Concerned Arts Professionals (FOCAP).
The Exposé: From Complaint to Documentation.
Unlike routine criticism that often circulates on social media and quickly fades, Kojo Preko Dankwa’s intervention took a different route. It was methodical, public-facing, and sustained.
Through press conferences, policy statements, interviews, and sector briefings, he laid out a detailed critique of the Creative Arts Agency, focusing on:
- Institutional opacity in decision-making
- Exclusion of key creative stakeholders from policy formulation
- Lack of measurable impact despite budgetary allocations
- Failure to build sustainable industry frameworks for artists and practitioners
- Political symbolism without structural delivery
Crucially, these were not framed as partisan attacks but as industry-based assessments, backed by lived experiences from practitioners across music, film, visual arts, theatre, fashion, and events.
The power of Kojo Preko Dankwa’s exposé lay not only in its content but in its timing and credibility.
By the time the critique gained national attention, creatives were already frustrated. The exposé simply gave language, structure, and leadership to sentiments that had long existed beneath the surface.
FOCAP’s platform amplified voices that had previously been fragmented. What once sounded like individual complaints now emerged as a collective indictment of institutional failure.
This reframing was critical. The issue was no longer about personalities within the Agency it became a referendum on how the ruling party related to the creative economy as a whole.
While it would be simplistic to claim that one exposé alone “lost” the NPP power nationally, within the creative sector, the impact was unmistakable.
The ruling party gradually lost:
- Moral authority among creatives
- Narrative control over its creative-sector record
- Trust as a stakeholder-friendly government
Creative professionals who double as influencers, cultural opinion leaders, and community mobilisers began openly distancing themselves. Endorsements dried up. Public enthusiasm softened. Silence replaced solidarity.
In political terms, this amounted to a collapse of soft power within a sector that shapes youth culture, public discourse, and national image.
At the heart of the controversy was the perception that the Creative Arts Agency had become politically ornamental rather than functionally transformative.
Kojo Preko Dankwa’s critique consistently returned to one central question:
What measurable value has the Agency delivered to creatives since its establishment?
The inability of authorities to convincingly answer this question deepened suspicion and reinforced the exposé’s credibility.
Why This Moment Matters Beyond Party Politics
This episode marked a turning point in Ghana’s creative advocacy. It demonstrated that:
- The creative sector can organise beyond individual celebrity voices
- Policy critique can be evidence-driven and sustained
- Cultural workers can influence political outcomes without partisan alignment
In effect, the exposé elevated creatives from campaign accessories to policy stakeholders.
A Warning to Future Governments
The fallout from the Creative Arts Agency exposé sends a clear message to any administration:
The creative sector is no longer satisfied with symbolism, appointments, or occasional grants. It demands structure, accountability, inclusion, and results.
Any government that ignores this does so at its own risk.
Kojo Preko Dankwa’s deep dive into the Creative Arts Agency did more than expose institutional weaknesses; it redefined the political consciousness of Ghana’s creative sector. What emerged was not just criticism, but a shift in power: from political patronage to sector-led accountability.
And in that shift lies the real reason the NPP lost ground within the creative community, not because creatives turned political, but because politics failed to keep faith with creativity.