LFA Executive Committee under fire: Weah warns 12-seat cap excludes new talent ahead of elections
Christian Weah warns Liberia Football Association’s 12-seat LFA Executive Committee risks locking out new leaders and urges statute reform before elections.
Weah frames the dispute as structural exclusion
Veteran administrator Christian G. Weah Sr. has escalated criticism of the Liberia Football Association’s governance, arguing the LFA Executive Committee’s 12-seat limit is outdated. He told listeners on Joy FM 101.5 that the capped structure threatens to exclude emerging leaders just as the national game grows in scale and complexity. The warning has refocused the pre-election conversation from personalities to the statutes that determine who can serve.
Weah, who previously led the Club Presidents Association of Liberia and runs Stages Queens, said the present arrangement does not match the realities of modern Liberian football. He described the failure to convene an extraordinary congress to amend the statutes as a missed opportunity to broaden representation. His comments suggest the debate over eligibility and numbers may be as important as the contest for the presidency itself.
The ’12-seat’ bottleneck and its origins
The core grievance centers on the LFA Executive Committee’s composition, which is currently limited to 12 elected members in addition to three vice presidents. That arrangement, Weah argues, was suitable for a smaller federation but now constrains representation across men’s and women’s leagues, regional associations and the expanding club base. Critics say the cap concentrates decision-making and can freeze out qualified candidates who could contribute technical, commercial, or governance expertise.
Supporters of the status quo counter that a compact committee can act more decisively and maintain operational cohesion. They point to the need for efficient governance during a period of reconstruction and development. The clash over numbers has therefore evolved into a broader argument about balancing agility with representation as Liberian football seeks professionalization.
Push for an extraordinary congress to change statutes
Weah has urged the LFA to use its mechanisms to convene an extraordinary congress and consider amendments to the statutes ahead of the election. He said such a gathering would provide a formal forum to review seat allocation, eligibility criteria and the broader governance framework. Without that process, he warned, the upcoming vote could enshrine limitations that will hamper the federation’s capacity to absorb new leadership talent.
An extraordinary congress would also create an opportunity for wider stakeholder input, including clubs, regional associations and women’s football representatives who have seen rapid growth. Those groups could make the case for proportional representation or reserved slots to ensure emerging voices have access to executive decision-making. The window to organize statutory change, however, is narrow given the electoral calendar, and any effort would need to meet the federation’s procedural deadlines.
Arguments for expansion and broader representation
Proponents of expanding the LFA Executive Committee point to the development of both men’s and women’s competitions, the rise in registered clubs, and growing technical demands. Weah specifically highlighted a “new wave” of candidates—naming potential entrants such as Elvis Sirleaf and Amos Tweh—whose expertise he believes would add immediate value. He framed expansion as a practical response to a larger, more complex football ecosystem that requires diverse skill sets.
Advocates also emphasize inclusion as a governance imperative: increasing seats could allow for regional balance, technical specialists on finance or development, and stronger female representation. Opponents worry expansion could lead to bloat, slower decision-making and factionalism. The debate therefore hinges on designing a structure that increases representation without undermining the committee’s ability to act.
Support for President Mustapha Raji alongside call for reform
Although he is a vocal critic of the statutes, Weah has publicly supported LFA President Mustapha Raji for re-election, acknowledging improvements in stability under his leadership. He praised strides made at the top while clarifying that his criticism is directed at the systemic limits beneath the presidency. That position reframes his campaign as reform-minded rather than oppositional, suggesting he seeks to work within existing leadership while pushing for institutional change.
Weah’s endorsement of Raji complicates the election narrative and underscores a split between support for leadership continuity and demand for structural modernization. It also raises questions about how reform proposals will be received by the incumbent administration and whether concessions might be brokered ahead of the vote. The tension between backing a president and campaigning for constitutional change is now a central feature of the electoral landscape.
Election dynamics: candidates, strategy and timing
With seats limited and interest rising, the contest for the LFA Executive Committee is expected to be intense. Prospective candidates are positioning themselves on credentials, track record in club or league management, and promises to widen access for underrepresented constituencies. Campaign strategies are likely to emphasize development plans, financial transparency and pathways for youth and women’s football to feed into governance.
Timing will be decisive. If proponents of statutory reform cannot secure an extraordinary congress or the amendments needed before nominations close, the ballot will proceed under current rules, effectively locking the composition of the executive body into its present constraints. Conversely, a successful reform process could reshape campaign tactics and expand the field of eligible contenders, forcing incumbents and newcomers to recalibrate alliances.
Implications for governance and the future of Liberian football
The dispute over the LFA Executive Committee’s size is more than an administrative quarrel; it is a debate about how Liberia manages its football development trajectory. Decisions made now could affect investment in leagues, the pace of professionalization, and the federation’s ability to implement reforms demanded by clubs and players. Observers say that inclusive governance would strengthen legitimacy and create a broader talent pipeline for administration and technical roles.
Conversely, failure to adapt could entrench gatekeeping and discourage qualified professionals from engaging in federation work. That risk is particularly salient for women’s football, which has expanded rapidly but often lacks proportionate representation in leadership. The outcome of this debate will set precedents for how the LFA balances tradition with the operational needs of a growing sport.
The coming weeks will test the federation’s capacity to manage competing interests while maintaining credibility with clubs, sponsors and international partners. If reform advocates can build consensus, the LFA may emerge with a more flexible statute that reflects modern demands. If not, the election could proceed amid renewed claims that the governance framework is out of step with the game it is responsible for serving.









