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Egypt Election Results: Muslim Brotherhood Wins Over One Third Of Vote

SARAH EL DEEB   12/ 4/11 11:34 AM ET   AP

CAIRO — Islamist parties captured an overwhelming majority of votes in the first round of Egypt's parliamentary elections, setting up a power struggle with the much weaker liberals behind the uprising that ousted Hosni Mubarak 10 months ago. A hard-line religious group that wants to impose strict Islamic law made a strong showing with nearly a quarter of the ballots, according to results released Sunday.

The tallies offer only a partial indication of how the new parliament will look. There are still two more rounds of voting in 18 of the country's 27 provinces over the coming month and runoff elections on Monday and Tuesday to determine almost all of the seats allocated for individuals in the first round. But the grip of the Islamists over the next parliament appears set, particularly considering their popularity in provinces voting in the next rounds.

The High Election Commission said the Islamic fundamentalist Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party garnered 36.6 percent of the 9.7 million valid ballots cast for party lists. The Nour Party, a more hard-line Islamist group, captured 24.4 percent.

The strong Islamist showing worries liberal parties, and even some religious parties, who fear the two groups will work to push a religious agenda. It has also left many of the youthful activists behind the uprising that ousted Mubarak in February feeling that their revolution has been hijacked.

Since Mubarak's fall, the groups that led the uprising and Islamists have been locked in a fight over the country's new constitution. The new parliament will be tasked, in theory, with selecting a 100-member panel to draft the new constitution. But adding to tensions, the ruling military council that took over from Mubarak has suggested it will choose 80 of those members, and said parliament will have no say in naming a new government.

"The conflict will be over the soul of Egypt," said Nabil Abdel-Fattah, a senior researcher at the state-sponsored Al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies, calling the new parliament "transitional" with a "very conservative Islamic" outlook.

The Brotherhood has emerged as the most organized and cohesive political force in these elections. But with no track record of governing, it is not yet clear how they will behave in power. The party has positioned itself as a moderate Islamist party that wants to implement Islamic law without sacrificing personal freedoms, and has said it will not seek an alliance with the more radical Nour party.

The ultraconservative Salafis who dominate the Nour Party are newcomers to the political scene. They had previously frowned upon involvement in politics and shunned elections. They espouse a strict interpretation of Islam similar to that of Saudi Arabia, where the sexes are segregated and women must be veiled and are barred from driving. Its members say laws contradicting religion can't be passed.

A Nour Party spokesman, Yousseri Hamad, suggested over the weekend, for example, that alcohol should be banned and that a state agency could penalize Muslims for eating during the day during the holy month of Ramadan, when the devout fast from dawn to dusk.

Many in Egypt's Coptic Christian population, which makes up 10 percent of the country, fear the Salafis will push for laws that will make them second-class citizens.

Egypt already uses Islamic law, or Shariah, as the basis for legislation. However, laws remain largely secular as Shariah does not cover all aspects of modern life.

If the Muslim Brotherhood chooses not to form an alliance with the Salafis, the liberal Egyptian Bloc – which came in third with 13.4 percent of the votes – could counterbalance hard-line elements.

It is also unclear how much influence the new parliament will have over Egypt's democratic transition and how long it will even serve.

The Muslim Brotherhood has said it will challenge moves by the military to retain overall control of key aspects of governing and the transition. A strong showing by Islamists in the elections could boost its popular mandate to do so.

The power struggle within parliament could shape up as a fight among the different Islamist trends or between the Islamists and the liberal and secular forces.

The elections, which began Nov. 28, are the first since Mubarak's ouster and the freest and fairest in Egypt's modern history.

Turnout of around 60 percent was the highest in living memory as few participated in the heavily rigged votes under Mubarak.

The ballots are a confusing mix of individual races and party lists, and the Sunday results only reflect the party list performance for less than a third of the 498-seat parliament.

Another liberal list, the Wafd Party, received 7.1 percent, while the moderate Islamist Wasat or Centrist Party took 4.3 percent.

The final shape of the lower house of parliament will not be announced before January. Elections for the less powerful upper house will finish in March.

The next step in the complex process, a round of runoffs between more than 100 individual candidates competing in the first round for around 50 seats, is set for Monday and Tuesday.

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Election officials count ballots for the parliamentary elections in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011. Egypt's military rulers are taking credit for the strong turnout in the country's first parliamentary elections since the ouster of Hosni Mubarak, the head of the election commission proclaims that the turnout so far is 'massive and unexpected.' (AP)
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CAIRO — Islamist parties captured an overwhelming majority of votes in the first round of Egypt's parliamentary elections, setting up a power struggle with the much weaker liberals behind the up...
CAIRO — Islamist parties captured an overwhelming majority of votes in the first round of Egypt's parliamentary elections, setting up a power struggle with the much weaker liberals behind the up...
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loOranks
I am the master of my fate; captain of my soul
05:30 AM on 12/07/2011
Feel the Egyptian waking up to democracy...
"One of Egypt's most prominent Salafist leaders has said he would only accept a Coptic Christian president of Egypt if the US, Britain and Israel accepted a Muslim president of their countries.

According to Yasser Burhami, head of the influential El-Dawa El-Salafiya (Salafist Call) group, Copts do not have the right to run for political office in Egypt.

He also said Salafists would not allow Egypt’s Baha’i community to hold religious festivals or mark their religion on National ID cards if they took power.

Speaking to journalist Hussein Abdel Ghani on El-Nahar channel Monday evening, Burhami also said a Salafist government would transform all banks into Islamic banks and prevent lenders from charging riba (interest), which is banned by Sharia law.

Burhami reiterated Salafists conditional support for a democratic transformation in the country.

“Salafists accept democracy according to Islamic rules as long as it is not incompatible with the demands of the people and of Islamic Sharia law,” Burhami said.

When asked about Salafist plans for Egypt’s tourism industry, Burhami said tourism need not violate Sharia law.

“Tourism is not all about nudity and alcohol,” Burhami said. “These things are rejected by Sharia law."
http://www.abna.ir/data.asp?lang=3&id=282552
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08:53 AM on 12/06/2011
part 2

“…Jihad Is the Way”, written by Mustafa Mashhur, who was the official leader of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt 1996-2002.
Publishing House: "Dar al-Tawziah wal-Nashr al-Islamia"
[Islamic Publishing and Distribution House], 1995

http://www.palwatch.org/main.aspx?fi=157&doc_id=5911

Stratfor has produced its usual excellent analysis (worth reading):

“Washington, like all capitals, likes policies and hates political philosophy. The policies frequently fail to come to grips with reality because the policymakers don’t grasp the philosophical implications.”

http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/20111205-egypt-and-idealist-realist-debate-us-foreign-policy?

And HP author Stephen Schwartz comments from the non Islamist Muslim point of view on the differences between Islamist government and liberal democracy:

“The distinction between "Islamic democracy," through which a party of religious believers might secure a cleaner and more accountable government administration, while keeping hands off an established, non-religious constitution and law, and "democratic Islamism," in which voting leads to a religious redefinition of the state and its mission, has yet to be discussed or clarified in the Arab lands or the West.”

http://www.islamicpluralism.org/1952/the-arab-spring-and-turkish-neo-islamists
11:32 AM on 12/06/2011
Thank you.
from Schwartz' non-Islamist viewpoint:

The success of the Islamists, even through the democratic means of the ballot box, represents reaction, not the forward movement most of the world, and certainly many Arabs, expected from the "Arab Spring." Rather than fostering an open, equitable system founded in civil society, the breakdown of public order in the affected Arab lands will most likely facilitate Islamist governance in which citizens' rights are restricted, not broadened.
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08:52 AM on 12/06/2011
Some heavy hitters comment on the election in Egypt as a tipping point in the slow Islamization of the Muslim world politics and consequent rejection of liberal democracy that arguably has been gaining momentum since the Iranian Revolution in 1979.

The Obama Administration is taking a wait and see stance:

"Asked during a briefing about the election and the possibility of Islamists winning, White House press secretary Jay Carney replied, “The fact of the matter is, the democratic process is what’s important.”

“Principles matter to this president, not parties,” he continued. “And we hold whatever party prevails or is represented in the outcome of an election like this – whether it’s in Egypt or elsewhere – our standards have to do with respect for human rights, respect for the democratic process, renunciation of violence, and inclusion of and respect for minorities in the process.”

http://news.yahoo.com/us-finds-reassurance-egypts-peaceful-voting-070923716.html

The Muslim Brotherhood has clearly stated its long term goals, which they presently find inconvenient:

- "...Jihad for Allah is not limited to the specific region of the Islamic countries, since the Muslim homeland is one and is not divided, and the banner of Jihad has already been raised in some of its parts, and it shall continue to be raised, with the help of Allah, until every inch of the land of Islam will be liberated, the State of Islam will be established,..."

continued
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12:34 AM on 12/06/2011
Egypt continues to burn to the ground from the chaos created by Salafis and the Muslim Brotherhood all throughout the country. Saudi Arabia & the Gulf States are supporting the Salafi's and Muslim Brotherhood Political Movement with weapons and financial funding. These extremists, who were previously imprisoned and are now at large, continue to abduct, rape and murder innocent christian girls and women. Recently, muslim girls have also been victims of attacks from armed gangs of criminals. Churches and properties of Coptic properties have been attacked, fire- bombed and destroyed. Coptic christians including Priests have been murdered and injured in numerous terrorist attacks by extremists. Daily, bodies of innocent victims are being un-covered throughout egypt, including that of priests and coptic girls. Very sadly, criminals are abducting innocent egyptians for large amounts of ransom. The military recently massacred over 26 coptic christians. Innocent civilians were murdered by live fire and mowed down by army tanks in Maspero - Cairo.
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12:33 AM on 12/06/2011
On 20 March 20 2011- A group of extremists attacked Ayman Anwar Mitri, a 45 year old Christian Coptic man in the Upper Egyptian town of Qena (Egypt), cutting off his ear. The extremists claimed they were applying Sharia law because he was allegedly framed of having an affair with a muslim woman. They also made a 10cm cut at the back of his neck, cut his other ear, his face and his arm. Mr. Mitri said they wanted to throw him off the fifth floor. The muslim extremists called the police and told them “We have applied the law of Allah, now come and apply your law,” according to Mr. Mitri in an interview for the Egyptian Human Rights Organization. We need human rights respected for everyone, whether muslim or non muslim.
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Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
06:42 PM on 12/05/2011
Here's a good article on the actual differences between the Muslim Brotherhood (whose political party seems fairly moderate -- the Vice President of the party is a Coptic Christian) and the ultra-conservative Salafists, who the Muslim Brotherhood has made clear they will not be aligning with.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/02/world/middleeast/egypts-muslim-brotherhood-keeps-distance-from-salafis.html
07:54 PM on 12/05/2011
More on the Muslim Brotherhood:

"The founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, Hassan al-Banna, whose disciples are now celebrating his birth 100 years ago, would have been ecstatic to witness their progress in implementing his plans to compel the world to submit to Islam. Radical Islam have made inroads in most countries with a Muslim majority, reached supremacy in several countries and its influence is steadily growing in western nations as well.

Petrodollars fuel this progress.Saudi Arabia welcomed the MB when Egypt expelled them in 1954. The sympathetic King Sa’ud even funded their 1961 establishment of Medina’s Islamic University. Moreover, the Saudis supply the funding with which the MB propagates Islam worldwide. In an interview with the London-based Asharq Al-Awsat, an international Arab daily on Dec. 11, 2005, Muslim Brotherhood international leader, Mohammad Mahdi Akef stated,

“the Muslim Brotherhood is a global movement whose members cooperate with each other throughout the world, based on the same religious worldview – the spread of Islam, until it rules the world.”

Most Muslim organizations in the West originated with the MB.

http://www.alyssaalappen.org/2006/11/24/the-progress-of-hassan-al-bannas-vision/
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Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
08:20 PM on 12/05/2011
That blog seems a bit biased, along anti-Islam lines.

As opposed to, say, and article from the New York Times.

Still, obviously, people can read both articles as they like, and make their own decisions.

I notice the dates in your article are from a while back, though.

The NY Times article refers to what the Muslim Brotherhood is doing and saying currently. I have no idea if they're as moderate as they present themselves to be -- but the fact that they're presenting themselves as moderate is interesting.

And, until they do anything extremist -- why not take them at their word -- as opposed to believing things that people who want to make them look bad say that they said or did, decades ago?
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scott63
Genius IQ public High School education.
06:02 PM on 12/05/2011
I don't think Egypt's military is going to stand down, they get two billion American dollars a year and all our advanced toys.That will stop if hard line Islamist take control, and so will tourism Egypts economy will completely tank.
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lenguss
05:06 PM on 12/05/2011
Any American who doesn't realize this is a war to the death between radical Islam and all other people is blind, or stupid, or both. First the Mohammedans have eliminated Jews, now they attack Christians (what few there are) in Irag, Indonesia, Egypt, Sudan, Nigeria, etc (there are none in Saudi Arabia or Yemen while we have plenty of those people here). This is truly a war of total destruction between people adhering to ancient myths and the rest of the world trying to live in the 21st century. Europeans are slowly awakening to this reality, that the Moslems hope to outbreed them, then conquer by 'democratic' means, a democracy which disappears as soon as they have power.
02:16 PM on 12/05/2011
There are Islamist apologists in these forums who were crying hoarse that Egyptians are "secular". Now the secularism of Egypt is there for all to see. The Facebook Egyptians are not in the list of winners. This is Iran all over again.
12:59 PM on 12/05/2011
who are we to decide for other peoples lives? if they chose to go "brotherhoods", let them go. If things don't work, next elections will allow for a change.
Before we dictate to others the values of democracy and which "hoods" to go, just look at our own system: we can't even have a people's congress, all we have is a corporation-infested congress run by money-greedy and wall street-loyal "sharkhoods."
12:52 PM on 12/05/2011
That was no surprises for me at all; since the beginning of what called Arab Spring, and I knew that: WE ARE HERE IN THE WEST INDEED, ON THE WRONG SIDE OF HE FUTURES!

Arab Spring, and after all has said and done, it will be the ANTI-WEST & ANTI-CHRISTIANS ANYWHERE!!

A 1,400 years of ISLAMS HISTORY HAD SAID SO! And nothing will or would be changeded; in fact what has changed is OUR IGNORANCE here in the WEST and under our own FREE THINKING of the LIBERAL MIND into the wrong way of thinking, that which have NO UNDERSTANDING OF WHAT ISLAM REALLY PROMOTES ABOUT, LIFE, LIBERTY, AND THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS!

It PROMOTES NONE, BUT WOMAN IS A MAN PROPERTY, AND THOSE WHOM ARE DO NOT BELIEVES MOHAMMED & MOHAMMEDAN RULES ARE AN INFIDELS!!! And that is where we go back to the meaning of A HOLY-WAR!!!

If you look back to the History of EGYPT, since was CONQUERED by ISLAMS (ARABS) in the SEVENTH Century, the vast MAJORITY OF THE PEOPLE THEN WERE A COPTIC CHRISTIAN ORTHODOX, and NOW THEY ARE only a 10% of the total Population's; the rest are ISLAMS. The Vast Majority of the Coptic, whether they were KILLED, OR CONVERTED TO ISLAM BY FORCE!

Just Think & Wonders; Easy To See The Reality & Facts Of Islams Beliefs, and with a final note: IT IS NOT ONLY THE PEOPLE, BUT ITS RELIGION BELIEVES!

THESE ARE FACTS; FACTS TALKS & THE B.S. WALKS!
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Yank in France
Rien se cree tout se transforme
12:15 PM on 12/05/2011
The victory of Islamic parties is terrible news for Egypt, but it only confirms the fears of moderates in Egypt who argued for more time to prepare for elections. The problem is that the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafasts were the best organized parties following the overthrow of the Mubarak dictatorship. After all, these groups are more than parties but social organizations that carry out social welfare activities among the poor.

Apparently the military regime feared the moderates more than they do the Islamists. I see no other explanation for going ahead with early voting, opposed by so many Egypitans, including those in Tahir Square.

With the MB totally dominant, we will soon learn if there exists any such beast as a "moderate" Islamist party...
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Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
06:35 PM on 12/05/2011
Well, the MB has a Coptic Christian Vice President for their political party (the FJP).

That seems at least somewhat moderate, I'd say.

http://www.christianpost.com/news/christian-vp-for-muslim-brotherhoods-party-50307/
09:47 PM on 12/05/2011
No it means they have a stooge-the Repubs have Palin and cain--your point?
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Yank in France
Rien se cree tout se transforme
01:13 AM on 12/06/2011
That doesn't prove anything, Doug. Political parties typically offer the Copts a ceremonial position. The facts on the ground are more compelling, with the MB pressured by the increasingly stronger Salafasts.

As one of the French govt ministers, a woman of Arab descent, said the other day; there is no such thing as a moderate Islamist. Like the Israelis, they make nice before the cameras, but what they do to women and minorities is not pretty, at all!
09:46 PM on 12/05/2011
And Doug Sandlin appears to shin in 3...2...1...
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lambdin1
What's this?
10:09 AM on 12/05/2011
Slow! Change does not happen with one vote or overnight. It will take decades before they find a government that works for them. Look at us! We are still working at it here!
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09:29 AM on 12/05/2011
A Canadian Muslim on Islamism:

http://www.islamicpluralism.org/1879/west-given-rosy-view-of-islamism
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09:01 AM on 12/05/2011
Looks like the Freemasons will get that Golden Cap on the Pyramids at Giza after all.....The Muslim Brotherhood are Freemasons if you didn't know this already.
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Doug Sandlin
We See The World Not As It Is But As We Are
06:35 PM on 12/05/2011
I didn't know that.

Have a link?