Amoafo-Yeboah noted that he picked his form early, not to show that he had money to spread but to give a clear indication that "from day one my focus had been to get my name unto the ballot paper and that is exactly what I am going to do."
"I believe that campaigning vigorously will be a useless exercise if after campaigning I did not get my name unto the ballot paper," he said.
If his name gets unto the ballot paper, Mr. Amoafo-Yeboah would have been the first independent candidate to have had his name on the ballot paper in the country.
Mr. Amoafo-Yeboah said he was well on his way to getting the mandated two signatories from all each of the over 100 districts across the country, saying that he was already done with Accra and was sure that by October 8, 2008 he would have gotten all the signatories.
"It is not as if I am now going to look for people to sign - I already have people across the country, it is just a matter of getting the forms to them," he said.
Mr. Amoafo-Yeboah said he had already selected his running mate, "a male", who would be outdoored on October 16, when he would submit his nomination forms to the EC.
But he refused to mention the name of his running mate.
Asked why he was not campaigning vigorously like his competitors he said; "I do not believe in rallies, I do one on one and house to house, but between October 17 and December 7, Ghanaians will see more of me."
Mr. Amoafo-Yeboah ridiculed promises of job creation being made by both the NDC and the NPP, saying that any political party that promised that its government would create jobs should not be taken seriously.
"Ghana Telecom, Ghana Airways and other state-owned companies are typical examples of the failure that awaits jobs created by a government," he said.
He said it was only jobs created by the many enterprising young people and private companies in the country with the support of the state that could be sustainable.
On that score he criticized the National Youth Employment Programme (NYEP) as a system bound to fail and called for it to be phased out.
"The NYEP is being run like a welfare system and so there is no way of measuring the output of the beneficiaries and yet we have earmarked huge sums from the talk tax to give to them as handouts," he said.
Mr. Amoafo-Yeboah said when he became President, he would rather give the money from the talk tax to the many enterprising young Ghanaians with great ideas and full of energy to create jobs for their colleagues.
On how he intended to run the country without a party support base in Parliament, he noted that his policies would be people-centred and he was therefore confident that parliament would support his policies even though he did not belong to any of the political parties represented in Parliament.