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Opposing views
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 28 - 03 - 2019

In hearing sessions on 27 and 28 March representatives of five leftist and liberal political parties launched a scathing attack on proposed changes to the constitution, reports Gamal Essam El-Din. The Egyptian Social Democratic Party, the Karama (Dignity) Party, the Conservatives Party, the Tagammu Party and the Reform and Development Party all denounced the amendments while the Islamist Nour Party said it had reservations over some of the changes.
Mohamed Anwar Al-Sadat, head of the Reform and Development Party, said the amendments “serve the interests of one person”.
Al-Sadat
He described the debate surrounding the amendments as “pre-packaged”.
Al-Sadat, who was expelled from parliament in 2017, said the process surrounding the amendments lacked transparency.
“I came to this dialogue only out of a sense of national obligation. Unfortunately the debate has never risen above the superficial,” said Al-Sadat.
Zahran
“The media has been effectively prevented from reporting the dialogue. The only figures allowed to appear on television are those who support the amendments. There has not been a single opposition voice in the national media.”
Al-Sadat said the bulk of the amendments were a cosmetic add-on intended to make the changes to Article 140, which will increase presidential terms, more palatable.
Mohamed Farid Zahran, head of the Egyptian Social Democratic Party, argued that “any changes to the constitution should be proposed and drafted by a constituent assembly to ensure they represent the wishes of society.”
“The current amendments are an attack on the principle of the rotation of power. They are there to allow one figure to stay in power. They also place the president of the republic as head of the Higher Council for Judges, undermining any separation of powers.”
Al-Sayed
Zahran described the debate around the amendments as shallow and flawed and said “the referendum will be held in an undemocratic climate, amid intense pro-regime media pressure.”
Mohamed Sami, head of the Karama Party, criticised attempts to create a second house without any significant legislative or supervisory powers as “a waste of money that will harm political and parliamentary life”.
Kamal Abu Eita, a former minister of labour, said the amendments “harm Egypt and President Al-Sisi”.
Abdel-Nasser Kandil, the Tagammu Party's secretary for parliamentary affairs, said that while the party had no objection in principle to the constitution being changed it opposed Article 140 being amended to allow President Al-Sisi to stand for two additional six-year terms once his current term ends in 2022. Kandil suggested a compromise, allowing President Al-Sisi's current term to be increased from four to six years, ending 2024, and allowing him to stand for a third term of six years, ending in 2030.
“We will support the creation of a second house only if it has meaningful legislative and supervisory powers, and approve reinstating the position of vice president on condition any nominee commands parliamentary support,” said Kandil.
Mustafa Kamel Al-Sayed, a professor of political science at Cairo University, said that while he had been keen to attend the national dialogue on 28 March not one media outlet had reported his comments.
“National newspapers simply published Speaker Abdel-Aal's response to my comments without mentioning a single word of what I said.”
Al-Sayed does not believe there is any pressing need to change the constitution, “a document that was approved by the overwhelming majority of citizens just five years ago”.
“The goal of the amendments is to allow the current president to stay in power and give him the power to name the heads of judicial authorities and appoint a third of members to a second parliamentary chamber,” said Al-Sayed. “The amendments fly in the face of the principle of rotation of power, and of the separation of powers.”
Nour Party representative Talaat Marzouk said the Salafist political grouping objected to allocating a 25 per cent quota of parliamentary seats to women, recreating the Shura Council, and the description of Egypt as a “civilian state”.


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