Abstract
This article examines the concerning trend of democratic decline in Ghana under President Nana Akufo-Addo by discussing how constitutional powers can become weapons against democracy itself. Once celebrated as Africa's democratic beacon, Ghana now stands as a stark warning of how executive overreach can systematically dismantle democratic safeguards. Through calculated manipulation of his presidential powers, Akufo-Addo has orchestrated a sweeping capture of three pillars of democracy: the judiciary, the Electoral Commission, and the Auditor-General's Office. By installing party loyalists in these crucial institutions, he has transformed independent oversight bodies into instruments of presidential power. Documentary evidence exposes a pattern of strategic appointments that have corroded Ghana's democratic foundation, replacing merit with political allegiance and institutional independence with partisan control. This systematic erosion of checks and balances has birthed a new form of autocracy – one that wields constitutional powers to create what can only be described as "constitutional tyranny." Ghana's unfolding crisis demonstrates how democracy dies not through dramatic coups but through the subtle manipulation of legal mechanisms, as Akufo-Addo's administration masterfully exploited constitutional loopholes to consolidate power and silence opposition. The nation's dramatic transformation from a democratic exemplar to a cautionary tale sends a chilling message to emerging democracies that constitutional powers, without robust institutional independence, can become tools for democracy's destruction.