1960 Ghanaian presidential election

Presidential elections were held for the first time in Ghana on 27 April 1960. The elections were held alongside a referendum on creating a republic with an executive presidency. The winner of the elections would become the country's first president if the new republican constitution was passed, which it did.

1960 Ghanaian presidential election

27 April 1960 1979 →
 
Nominee Kwame Nkrumah J. B. Danquah
Party CPP United Party
Popular vote 1,016,076 124,623
Percentage 89.07% 10.93%

Elected President

Kwame Nkrumah
CPP

Candidates

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There were only two candidates:

Results

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CandidatePartyVotes%
Kwame NkrumahConvention People's Party1,016,07689.07
J. B. DanquahUnited Party124,62310.93
Total1,140,699100.00
Registered voters/turnout2,098,651
Source: African Elections Database

Aftermath

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After winning the election, and the passing of the new constitution in the simultaneous referendum, Nkrumah was inaugurated on 1 July 1960, replacing Governor-General William Hare as head of state. Danquah was imprisoned the following year under the Preventive Detention Act, but only held for a year. On his release, he was elected President of the Ghana Bar Association. He was imprisoned again in 1964 and died in jail.

Four years later, another referendum strengthened Nkrumah's powers and turned the country into a one-party state (with an official result of 99.91% in support).