However, the Mansa hitmaker wasn't without caution. While he acknowledged the positives under the new administration — pointing to the cedi's improved performance against the dollar as an early green flag — he warned that the pace at which Mahama is moving could become a double-edged sword. "Mahama is moving too fast," he said plainly, adding that early wins alone won't be enough to secure the president's legacy if things go south later in the term. His bigger concern, though, was directed at Ghanaians themselves. Drawing on what happened to the previous NPP administration, Bisa Kdei argued that voters tend to judge leaders heavily on how their tenure ends rather than what they built along the way. The NPP, he noted, had its achievements, but the hardships that defined its final years wiped out the goodwill it had accumulated — and that's ultimately what drove people to demand change. His message to President Mahama was essentially one of pacing and sustainability — do the work, but don't burn so bright so early that there's nothing left to show by election season. And to Ghanaians, he issued a reminder to be fair, accountable, and consistent in how they judge their leaders — not just when things get tough, but when things are going well too.