Private legal practitioner Martin Kpebu has identified Ghana’s unemployment crisis as the primary engine driving the rise of “mushroom churches” and the subsequent wave of failed electoral prophecies.

Speaking on TV3’s ‘Key Points’ on Saturday, February 7, 2026, Kpebu argued that economic desperation is funneling vulnerable citizens into the hands of self-styled “men of God” who use the pulpit as a survival strategy.

Kpebu did not mince words, describing the proliferation of smaller, unregulated churches as a direct symptom of a failing job market.

“Mushroom churches are an escape route for unemployment,” Kpebu stated.

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“Unemployment is a huge push factor for these pastors; it pushes a lot of people into their hands,” he explained.

He indicated that when people are desperate for work, they become easy targets for anyone promising a supernatural solution.

“Once you preach that you will have a job tomorrow, they come to you,” he added.

The discussion follows the defeat of Kennedy Agyapong in the recent New Patriotic Party (NPP) presidential primaries.

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Several high-profile “prophets” had publicly predicted a victory for the former Assin Central MP, but those predictions were eventually disproven by the official results.

Prophet ElBernard, whose prophecy on Kennedy Agyapong failed, has since announced a hiatus from making public political declarations following the defeat of his candidate.

Kpebu’s analysis suggests that these failed prophecies aren’t just spiritual errors, but rather products of a system built on the desperation of both the “prophet” seeking a livelihood and the “follower” seeking a miracle.

VPO/EB

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