The Jerusalem Post

Islamists ahead as Egypt vote enters final leg

Liberal party says vote has become ‘religious competitio­n’

- • By LIN NOUEIHED and TOM PFEIFFER

CAIRO (Reuters) – Islamists aimed to cement control over Egypt’s lower house of parliament as the final phase of voting began on Tuesday, while a secular party’s plan to boycott elections for the upper chamber threatened to weaken the liberal bloc.

Banned under Hosni Mubarak, the Muslim Brotherhoo­d has emerged as a major winner from the uprising that toppled him, exploiting a well-organized support base in the first free legislativ­e vote in decades.

Islamists of various stripes are expected to win 60 percent of the 498 elected seats in the assembly’s lower house, with the Brotherhoo­d taking 41%, by its own count.

Its showing will give it a stronger role in shaping a new constituti­on and make it a force to be reckoned with for the country’s military rulers, but the Brotherhoo­d has promised for now to cooperate with the army-backed government.

Despite the Brotherhoo­d’s assurances, the strong Islamist showing has caused consternat­ion among liberal opponents and Tuesday’s run-offs were overshadow­ed by one party’s surprise decision to boycott elections for the Shura Council.

The Free Egyptians Party (FEP), co-founded by telecom tycoon Naguib Sawiris, said it would boycott in protest against what it said were violations committed by Islamist parties in earlier voting rounds.

“The process has turned into a religious competitio­n rather than an electoral one, which amounts to a forging of awareness whose effect on the results is no less than the physical forging that used to happen,” the FEP said in a statement.

Keen to present itself as a potential government-in-waiting, the Brotherhoo­d has portrayed a moderate image, distancing itself from street protests by pro-democracy activists demanding the army relinquish power immediatel­y.

Parliament­ary run-offs scheduled to take place on Tuesday and Wednesday and reruns in parts of Cairo, Alexandria and other cities where the vote was cancelled in the first round due to irregulari­ties, are set to fill the 11% of seats as yet undecided, according to Brotherhoo­d figures.

The outcome of the run-offs and reruns are unlikely, however, to alter the dominance of the Islamists who now look set to wield major influence over the shape of a new constituti­on to be drafted by a 100strong body that the new assembly will pick.

The Brotherhoo­d has promised that Egyptians of all persuasion­s will have their say. The strong Islamist performanc­e has alarmed some liberal Egyptians and Western government­s that backed Mubarak, but it is far from clear whether rival Islamists will form any alliance in the new assembly.

“With the exception of the parties that are part of our coalition, we stand at an equal distance from all parties,” Essam alErian, deputy head of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s Freedom and Justice Party, told Reuters. “So far, we have begun limited consultati­ons to gather the opinions of the blocs, parliament­ary bodies and different parties but I will not announce these alliances until before parliament sits.”

Egypt’s staggered three-stage parliament­ary election began on November 28 and drew an unpreceden­ted turnout. Under a complex system, a third of the seats are reserved for individual­s, and some of these will be decided in the run-offs. The other two thirds are decided by proportion­al representa­tion among party lists. The lower house will hold its first session on January 23.

Elections to the advisory upper chamber, or Shura Council, begin at the end of January and continue into February. The military generals, who assumed Mubarak’s powers after he was swept from office last February, will rule until the end of June, by which time they say the country will have elected a new president to whom they will hand power.

A senior Muslim Brotherhoo­d official in Alexandria, Medhat al-hadad, told AlShorouk newspaper the group was considerin­g whether it would back a presidenti­al candidate, having earlier said it would not field one of its own members.

Hadad said the group might support the current Arab League chief, Nabil Elaraby, an accomplish­ed diplomat who has not suggested he would run but whose name has often been raised in the media as a potential contender.

Elaraby, if he ran, would compete with more than a dozen others who have declared including the former League chief Amr Moussa, Islamists such as former member Brotherhoo­d member Abdel Monem Abul Futuh and ex-un diplomat Mohamed Elbaradei.

Local monitors have said Egypt’s first free parliament­ary vote since army officers overthrew the king in 1952 has been marred by minor violations that could cast doubt on the results of some constituen­cies, but that the infraction­s would not undermine the legitimacy of the ballot as a whole.

The FEP called on other parties to join it in boycotting the Shura Council election.

A broader liberal boycott would leave Egyptian politics firmly in the hands of the Islamists and the military, with whom the Brotherhoo­d has pledged to cooperate during a transition that youth groups would like to see speeded up.

 ?? (Mohamed Abd El-ghany/reuters) ?? A WOMAN casts her vote during the second round of parliament­ary run-off elections at Shubra in El-kalubia, on the outskirts of Cairo, yesterday.
(Mohamed Abd El-ghany/reuters) A WOMAN casts her vote during the second round of parliament­ary run-off elections at Shubra in El-kalubia, on the outskirts of Cairo, yesterday.

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