Albuquerque Journal

Egyptians welcome Morsi

New President Claims Revolution’s Mantle

- By Maggie Michael

New president has claimed the mantle of the revolution that ousted Hosni Mubarak last year.

CAIRO — Standing before tens of thousands of adoring supporters in Tahrir Square, President Mohammed Morsi opened his jacket in a show of bravado to prove he was not wearing a bullet-proof vest. The message was clear: He has nothing to fear because he sees himself as the legitimate representa­tive of Egypt’s uprising.

In the week since he was named president, Morsi has portrayed himself as a simple man, uninterest­ed in the trappings of power and refusing to take up residence in the presidenti­al palace.

His speeches reveal a populist bent, filled with generous promises many are skeptical he can keep. And although he began as an awkward and uninspirin­g speaker, Morsi appears to be striving to reinvent his uncharisma­tic public persona.

After eking out a narrow victory in last month’s runoff, Morsi has claimed the mantle of the revolution that ousted Hosni Mubarak last year.

But his Muslim Brotherhoo­d did not join the uprising until it had gained irreversib­le momentum. And its critics say the Islamic fundamenta­list group has hijacked the movement that was led by secular and liberal youths, and abandoned demonstrat­ors during deadly clashes with security forces in the months that followed Mubarak’s February 2011 ouster.

Morsi’s moves are an attempt to make up for the way he came to power, narrowly defeating Mubarak’s last prime minister in a runoff that had just a 51 percent turnout, said Karima Kamal, a minority Christian activist and writer.

“He knows that he did not come to power because voters liked him. But the general impression in the street now is that he is a kind and simple man who came from a simple family. This is reassuring to many people,” she said.

A U.S.-trained engineer who lectured at a Nile Delta university, Morsi, 61, has none of the grandeur or name recognitio­n of his predecesso­rs.

Mubarak was a decorated war hero who was in office long enough to become a global household name. Anwar Sadat was the darling of the West, disengagin­g Egypt from decades of dependence on the Soviet Union and making peace with Israel. Gamal Abdel-Nasser was an Arab nationalis­t and an anti-colonialis­t hero who commanded respect and admiration across the Arab world.

Morsi, by contrast, was only months ago a little-known Islamist politician with no oratorical skills, no history of military prowess and no internatio­nal standing. Still, he may represent a change in style and substance that Egyptians are ready for after millions took to the streets in last year’s stunning uprising.

Columnist Salama Ahmed Salama said Morsi has made progress in the relatively short time he has been in the limelight.

“What we see now is a much more daring, open and talkative personalit­y than the conservati­ve and introverte­d Morsi we knew before,” he said. “He is doing his best to fill the seat, but it is hard for him.”

On Sunday, his first full day as president, Morsi decreed a 15 percent salary bonus to state employees and substantia­lly raised the state stipend for the poorest in what many saw as a return to Mubarak’s tactic of trying to appease the population of 85 million, nearly half of whom live in poverty.

During his speech Friday in Tahrir Square, Morsi roused the crowd with his loud words and constant fingerwagg­ing. When he opened his jacket in a dramatic gesture — “I fear no one but God,” he declared — he was surrounded by 12 burly security officers.

“When he lifted his jacket and moved closer to the people, to speak to them directly, I felt he was trying to claim leadership ... for himself as Mohammed Morsi, not the Muslim Brotherhoo­d man,” columnist Emadeddin Hussein wrote in the independen­t el-Shorouk daily.

“The man we saw was the real Mohammed Morsi, not the spare tire,” he said, referring to the unflatteri­ng moniker thrust on Morsi as a reminder that the Muslim Brotherhoo­d only fielded him after its first-choice candidate was thrown out of the race over a Mubarak-era conviction.

The generals who took over from Mubarak last year stripped the presidency of many of its major powers in the two weeks before Saturday’s handover to Morsi. They dissolved the Muslim Brotherhoo­d-dominated parliament and gave themselves legislativ­e power, as well as significan­t influence over domestic and foreign policy and the drafting of a new constituti­on.

Much of what Morsi has done over the past week was aimed at allaying the concerns of liberals, women and minority Christians that he will inject more religion into government or even turn Egypt into an Islamic state. In the meantime, he has sought to project an image of himself as humble, fair and pious, qualities that have struck a chord with Egyptians long accustomed to the pomp and personalit­y cult of his predecesso­rs.

 ?? AMR NABIL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Egypt’s President-elect Mohammed Morsi opens his suit jacket to show his supporters that he is not wearing body armor and has nothing to fear.
AMR NABIL/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Egypt’s President-elect Mohammed Morsi opens his suit jacket to show his supporters that he is not wearing body armor and has nothing to fear.

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