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Marginalia: Let the showdown begin
Published in Al-Ahram Weekly on 12 - 01 - 2012


By Mona Anis
With almost ten days to go before the lower chamber of the Egyptian parliament, the People's Assembly, is scheduled to open, the elections are drawing to a conclusion with the run-offs of the third and final stage taking place as I write this column. The results of the run-off elections will be announced in the next two days, thus deciding almost 90 per cent of the seats in the Assembly, leaving some 10 per cent to next week when voters in a number of constituencies, previously annulled by court decision due to legal violations, will go to the polls between now and January 20, subject to a court decision for each constituency, to cast their votes for a second time.
Due to the complicated electoral system adopted in the election, one that mixes a party list system with individual candidacies voted for by simple majority (two-thirds for the former and one third for the latter), precise figures regarding who won what will not be available before the final results are announced a day or two before the opening of the Assembly on 23 February. However, figures released by the Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood and overall winner in the elections, confirm the landslide victory of the Islamist groups in general, and of the FJP in particular.
While the FJP had garnered 161 out of the 309 seats decided during the first two stages of the elections by the end of their second stage, this number has now risen to 207 out of the approximately 420 seats thus far determined. On the other hand, the Salafist Al-Nour Party, which had garnered 82 seats by the end of the second stage, has now won another 24 in the first half of the third stage, meaning that the Party now has 106 seats, representing slightly more than 25 per cent of the total number of seats contested up to now. These percentages of 50 per cent for the FJP and 25 per cent for the Salafists, plus or minus two per cent, have been constants of the elections throughout. While it is of no great consequence whether the Salafists attain 25 per cent or so of the seats, it matters greatly if the FJP can achieve a simple majority of 50+1 per cent of them.
This is because future political alliances within the new parliament will depend to some extent on whether or not the FJP can get a simple majority of the seats, since a two-thirds majority is required only for the most important decisions, with all others being decided by simple majority. Indeed, it is this question of which party is likely to ally itself with which other that now preoccupies political forces both within and outside parliament.
Within parliament, other than the ascendant Islamist groups there are two other liberal forces, the Wafd Party and the Egyptian Bloc, each of which possesses some 10 per cent of the seats, with the remaining seats being divided up amongst the smaller parties and independents. Outside parliament, there is the country's de facto ruler, the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), and the young revolutionaries who for the past few months have been challenging the authority of the SCAF by staging demonstrations and sit-ins in Cairo's Tahrir Square and who are now demanding that the SCAF hand over power to the People's Assembly by 25 January, the first anniversary of the uprising that toppled former president Hosni Mubarak one year ago.
So far, the Islamists have largely distanced themselves from the young militants on the streets, paying only lip service to the causes that have made them take to the streets, often in their hundreds and sometimes in their thousands. Since last summer, the Islamists have steered away from getting involved in occupations or street battles staged by the young radicals, focusing instead on getting ready for the elections. Indeed, it was their total absorption in preparing for the elections and avoiding any clashes that might have endangered the long process of campaigning for and contesting the elections that brought the Islamists closer to the ruling SCAF.
Now that the major part of the parliamentary elections will soon be over, the elections to the upper chamber of the parliament, which has only consultative status, and of the much smaller number of elected representatives being of no great consequence, the door is wide open to a repositioning by all the political forces that contested the elections, though perhaps not by the SCAF or the militants who want to bring down its rule. The former remains entrenched in the position of wanting to safeguard its interests and privileges before it exits the political arena, while the latter will hear of nothing less than the immediate exit of the SCAF from power without any safety guarantees.
This repositioning of forces might carry some surprises with it. The FJP, having emerged from the elections as the most powerful political force in the country, might want to try to regain some of the popularity it lost with the radical youth by taking a firmer stance vis-�-vis the SCAF, especially now that the SCAF is clamping down on opposition to its rule. In an attempt to quell what remains of the radical wave that swept the country over the past year, the security forces are now dealing much more harshly with the street protests, claiming that the radicals taking part in them are endangering the country's national security by bringing about a "rift between the armed forces and the Egyptian people."
Over the past week alone, five leading pro-Tahrir figures, including the popular imam of the Omar Makram Mosque in Tahrir Square, popularly known as the "orator of the Revolution," have been summoned by the prosecutor-general to answer questions relating to their role in allegedly instigating the riots that took place in Qasr El-Aini Street off Tahrir Square in December.
Meanwhile, the Al-Nour Party seems to be keen on allying itself with the SCAF, and it has defended the military, accusing dissenting voices of endangering the stability of the state. The Salafists have not been able either to resist the temptation of getting engaged in antiquated fights about Islam and the implementation of Sharia Law in the country. This week, they forced business tycoon Naguib Sawiris to stand in court, accused of "insulting Islam" by forwarding a picture of cartoon characters Mickey Mouse and Mini Mouse dressed as Salafists on Twitter, Micky bearded and wearing a galabiyya and Mini in full veil. Though it is likely that Sawiris will be acquitted of the charge when he attends the court next week, the incident has been taken by many as a sign of things to come should the Salafists carry out their threat to act as the country's de facto moral police.
If the Salafists continue, as many expect them to do, with their skewed agenda, then this is likely to cause the Muslim Brotherhood to try to distance itself from them still further and to rely more and more on other parliamentary allies among the non-Islamist forces. However, as mentioned earlier, a lot will depend on whether the Brotherhood can obtain a simple majority of the seats in the new parliament. This will not be clear before the final count of the votes takes place on the eve of the opening of the new parliament.


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