The Sentinel-Record

In Egypt race, figure from old era is secular hope

- MAGGIE MICHAEL AND LEE KEATH

CAIRO — In the race to become the first president of the new Egypt, the secular candidate with the strongest chance of beating increasing­ly powerful Islamists has to overcome the baggage he brings from the old Egypt.

On the campaign trail ahead of next month’s landmark vote, the 76- year- old Amr Moussa presents himself as an elder statesman with years of experience in politics and government, first from a decade as foreign minister under former President Hosni Mubarak, then from another decade leading the Arab League.

“I can start from minute one as president,” Moussa told reporters earlier this month. “The country is in a major crisis, and a major crisis doesn’t justify at all a president who will ask around, ’ What should I do at this point or that point?’ and gaining experience as he goes.”

The same experience is Moussa’s vulnerabil­ity — given his links to the Mubarak regime, which last year’s uprising aimed to uproot.

To some in the Egyptian public, Moussa is one of the “feloul,” the “remnants” of the old state who they believe will not reform Egypt’s longtime autocratic system or challenge the military’s dominance over the country’s politics.

“No to feloul,” proclaimed banners with Moussa’s photo — crossed out with a red X — unfurled during anti- military protests held by tens of thousands of Islamists and liberals earlier this month in Cairo’s Tahrir Square.

Moussa’s front- runner status is testimony to how secular, liberal and leftist movements that led the anti- Mubarak uprising have been unable to put forward a prominent figure to carry the banner of the revolution. As a result, Moussa stands as the main alternativ­e for Egyptians who fear that Islamists, who already dominate parliament, will transform the country into a religious state if they also win the presidency.

Moussa’s top competitio­n is Mohammed Morsi, the candidate of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, Egypt’s strongest political movement, which emerged from parliament elections late last year with nearly half the legislatur­e’s seats.

The question is whether voters see the election as a choice between secularism and Islamists or between old and new, said Ahmed Khairi, a spokesman for the liberal Free Egyptians Party, who spoke in favor of Moussa though the party has not officially backed him.

“I think that after what we saw in parliament elections, the presidenti­al vote will be on the grounds of civil versus Islamic, and here Moussa is at the top of all,” Khairi said. “If the vote is revolution­ary versus non- revolution­ary, Moussa is a loser.”

Moussa sought to play on worries over Islamists in a campaign message Thursday. He said the election is a chance to put Egypt on a path toward “true democracy and a strong, competitiv­e economy” — or else to adopt “concepts and styles that will restrain Egypt’s flourishin­g and throw us into a whirlpool of internal conflict,” an indirect reference to Islamists.

Helping Moussa is the reputation he built in the public eye as an outsider in Mubarak’s regime.

As foreign minister from 1991 to 2001, he became popular for his vocal criticism of Israel in a government that many Egyptians saw as too cooperativ­e with the Jewish state. According to Egyptian political lore that Moussa has been happy to fuel, a hit pop song from the time called “I Love Amr Moussa, I Hate Israel” prompted Mubarak to dump Moussa from the foreign ministry and move him to the Arab League, fearing that he was emerging as a possible rival.

Known for his Cuban cigars and cool temperamen­t, Moussa has name recognitio­n among Egyptians from his years at sum- mits and internatio­nal negotiatio­ns — while avoiding a role in the most hated tools of Mubarak’s rule, such as the ruling party and security forces.

“He is from the old regime but he was at a distance from the president,” said Hala Mustafa, a political analyst.

Now in the campaign, Moussa has tried to rebrand himself as an advocate for the poor, giving up his cigars and his classic ties and plastering lower- income districts with posters proclaimin­g him “the Knight of Egypt.” Earlier this month, he used one of Cairo’s most impoverish­ed slums and a hideout for drug trafficker­s and thugs, Ezbat el- Haggana, as a backdrop for announcing the details of his political program.

Speaking from a podium set up in a potholed street, he vowed to set up a welfare system to protect the poor in the first 100 days of his administra­tion — including a minimum wage, reform of labor laws and unemployme­nt assistance — while increasing government investment to generate jobs and using his internatio­nal contacts to draw financial aid and investment.

 ??  ?? ELDER STATESMAN: In this Nov. 28, 2011 photo, Egyptian presidenti­al hopeful Amr Moussa, center, waits outside a polling station before voting on the first day of parliament­ary elections in Cairo, Egypt. In the race to become the first president of the...
ELDER STATESMAN: In this Nov. 28, 2011 photo, Egyptian presidenti­al hopeful Amr Moussa, center, waits outside a polling station before voting on the first day of parliament­ary elections in Cairo, Egypt. In the race to become the first president of the...
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