Controlled Reform in Egypt: Neither Reformist nor
Controlled
Issandr El
Amrani
December 15,
2005
(Issandr El Amrani is a freelance journalist based in
Cairo.)
Noha
al-Zeiny’s article is available online.
For background on the presidential election, see Mariz
Tadros, “Egypt’s
Election All About Image, Almost,” Middle East Report
Online, September 6,
2005.
See also Mona El-Ghobashy, “Egypt Looks
Ahead to Portentous Year,” Middle East Report
Online, February 2,
2005. |
Drawn out over
five weeks in November and December 2005, Egypt’s parliamentary
elections gripped a country normally jaded about formal politics --
and produced some surprising results. While the ruling National
Democratic Party retained a large majority of seats in the
legislature when the votes were counted, more than half of its
candidates went down to defeat. The secular opposition parties,
already weak, were crushed, losing most of their seats. Candidates
associated with the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, meanwhile, surged
to an unexpectedly strong showing. These developments, along with
rampant vote buying and violence that claimed the lives of 11 people
and wounded hundreds more, kept Egyptians accustomed to yawning at
the country’s electoral exercises glued to the television screen.
The
parliamentary elections were to have been the ultimate test of the
government’s commitment, after a year of disappointing false starts,
to its promises of a “democratic flowering” in Egypt. If the
government’s conduct during the polling justified skepticism about
the prospects of top-down political reform, so did the government’s
inability to engineer the outcome as completely as in the past. If
the regime’s path to reform is advertised as controlled political
liberalization, the elections have shown the path to be neither
controlled nor truly reformist. For a small, but increasingly
influential group of Egyptian liberals worried by the prospects of
authoritarian regression and/or a strengthened Islamist movement
over the coming decade, the elections point to the regime’s failure
at managing the reform agenda. They may now look for a solution
elsewhere.
PSEUDO-REFORMS
Starting in the
early months of 2005, the Egyptian regime stepped up an effort to
soften its authoritarian image. The “reform” agenda has been set by
President Husni Mubarak himself, beginning with his startling
announcement on February 26 that he would ask Parliament to amend
Article 76 of the constitution to allow for the first
multi-candidate presidential election in the country’s history. Even
hardened opposition figures had to cheer, despite what most, even
then, regarded as the foregone conclusion that in September Mubarak
would win a fifth term in office.
By the time the
People’s Assembly had agreed upon wording for the amendment,
however, much of the initial enthusiasm had evaporated. The
amendment, which passed a national referendum on May 25, placed
stringent restrictions on who could run for the presidency,
practically barring the door to independent candidates, and, beyond
the 2005 election, rendering it exceedingly difficult for candidates
from the small “legal” opposition parties to get the necessary
number of endorsements from elected officials. Leading opposition
figures and even some liberal members of Mubarak’s National
Democratic Party (NDP) expressed their dismay.
Moreover, the
conduct of the referendum was flawed in two important respects.
Though the regime had intended to broadcast the image of a
democratizing Egypt, the lasting visuals captured by local and
international media depicted the violence with which pro-NDP thugs
attacked anti-Mubarak protesters, including women, outside polling
stations. Second, the official turnout figure of 54 percent was
called into question by civil society organizations and the
independent and opposition press, which ran accounts of voters
casting multiple ballots and other irregularities. On July 2, the
Judges’ Club -- the professional syndicate of the Egyptian bench
that has been vocally campaigning for greater judicial independence
-- issued a report confirming that turnout figures had been
manipulated to exaggerate public backing for the amendment. The
judges noted that, in several constituencies, turnout had been
officially registered at 100 percent. In the terse words of the
report: “Nobody died, nobody traveled, nobody was sick, had to work
or was too lazy to go to vote?”
The controversy
over the referendum was followed by a heated battle in the People’s
Assembly over amendments to the laws governing, among other things,
the formation of political parties, political fundraising and access
to electoral information. Law 175 of 2005, which amended Law 38 of
1972, concerned the election directly. In it the government
responded to long-standing demands of the opposition, notably
stressing that security services should not interfere in elections,
banning electioneering in government offices and confirming the
judiciary’s right to monitor balloting. As in other laws, however,
the NDP added provisions that seemed targeted at the Muslim
Brotherhood, such as proscribing the use of mosques or prayer sites
in campaigns. These laws were rushed through Parliament in late June
with little attempt at discussion with the opposition, which
protested both the laws’ content and the manner in which they were
passed.
MORE AT
STAKE
Swallowing
their disappointment at these pseudo-reforms, the opposition
mobilized for the parliamentary elections, in which they knew a
great deal was at stake. The newly amended Article 76 and the new
electoral laws had established a prerequisite for
government-recognized parties that wanted to field a candidate in
future presidential elections: control of at least 5 percent of the
People’s Assembly.
Beyond that, in
the July 20 speech launching his campaign, Mubarak had pledged to
move ahead with important political reforms in 2006, notably
replacement of the emergency law in place since 1981 with
anti-terror legislation (another goal long pursued by the
opposition) and introduction of measures increasing the powers of
Parliament at the expense of the presidency. While the presence of a
larger opposition bloc would not necessarily guarantee that the
opposition would be listened to -- the NDP was still certain to
control enough seats to pass any law it wanted -- an opposition
united in its demands could at least contribute to debates and
highlight the inadequacies of the regime’s legislation.
Officially, the
NDP itself encouraged the participation of the opposition. But the
ruling party’s new leadership, under the president’s son, Gamal
Mubarak, faced a dilemma. On the one hand, the younger Mubarak had
justified his entry into party politics after the 2000 elections on
the grounds that declared NDP candidates had fared poorly against
“independents” -- party members who quit before the elections only
to “rejoin” after winning seats. In 2000, in fact, official NDP
candidates obtained only 38 percent of the seats in the People’s
Assembly, and the party only achieved its 90 percent majority when
the so-called independents “rejoined.” In some cases, the
“independents” belonged to factions at odds with the party
leadership; in others, they were people who simply wanted the seat
and were confident they would be taken into the NDP fold to pad its
majority. Gamal had to prove that he and his coterie of “reformists”
could not only improve the party’s image, but also win elections
under the NDP banner. On the other hand, domestic and foreign
pressure dictated that opposition forces occupy a greater number of
seats in the next parliament; a return to 90 percent NDP control of
the People’s Assembly would be described as a farce no matter how
clean the contests.
Before the
elections, therefore, there was a general expectation that while the
NDP would do well, it would no longer command an overwhelming
majority. When party spokesman Muhammad Kamal was asked what score
he would like to achieve, for instance, he set the low standard of
anything above the official 38 percent of 2000. It was expected that
the Muslim Brotherhood would make gains. (Though the group is
officially “illegal” and cannot run candidates under its own name,
in the last several elections “independents” with widely known
Brotherhood affiliations have run.) In statements to the press prior
to the elections, the organization’s supreme guide, Muhammad Mahdi
Akif, predicted that Brotherhood hopefuls would win 50-70 seats,
whereas NDP officials did not expect them to win more than 40 seats.
It was also expected that secular opposition parties, two of which
had together secured about 10 percent of the vote in the
presidential election, would increase their presence in Parliament.
These
expectations, combined with the bolstered legal authority given to
supervising judges and the introduction of phosphorus ink and
transparent ballot boxes at polling stations, led to a general
impression that the 2005 parliamentary elections would be freer and
fairer than their precedents. This feeling was reinforced by the
release of hundreds of Muslim Brothers detained since May 2005 and
the fact that, unlike in 2000, none of the Brotherhood’s campaigners
were arrested in the runup to the first round. On the eve of the
elections, Essam al-Erian, a senior Muslim Brother, told Middle
East Report that there was not
a single member of the Brotherhood in prison for the first time
since 1995.
THUGS AND A
WHISTLEBLOWER
In practice,
during the first round of the elections, held on November 9 with a
runoff on November 15, there was markedly less violence and
obstruction by security forces than on previous occasions. Incidents
of violence did take place, but apparently at the behest of
individual candidates who hired thugs to beat up on their opponents’
supporters. A far more serious problem was widespread fraud.
Independent monitors and journalists reported dozens of cases where
public-sector employees were bussed in en masse, as well as
confusion about and manipulation of registered voters lists, and
open vote buying. Some reports had would-be voters promising to
support certain candidates in exchange for canned food or soft
drinks.
Many Egyptian
commentators were scandalized to see this chaos, blaming it on the
fierce competition for seats and soaring campaign spending, notably
by independent businessmen allied with the NDP, but also by the
Muslim Brotherhood. “The Muslim Brotherhood uses religion to impose
itself while the NDP buys votes to maintain its control of
Parliament against the people’s wishes,” noted Abd al-Halim Qandil,
editor-in-chief of the Nasserist weekly al-‘Arabi. “A seat in Parliament is the best
investment in Egypt: one million spent on a campaign will generate
ten million after the election of the candidate, who will use his
position to make corrupt gains.”
But aside from
the cheating, a second trend was emerging: while they were not
interfering with the balloting, security forces were guilty of
“passive neutrality” -- in other words, deliberate failure to
intervene to stop those candidates carrying out the fraud and
violence, who tended to come from the NDP.
With
first-round results showing that the Muslim Brotherhood had already
doubled its number of seats, the regime’s tactics began to shift.
Analysts had predicted that the Brotherhood would fare better in the
second and third rounds, which were held in districts where it is
popular. The first part of the second round, held on November 20,
saw the beginning of massive interference by security forces,
notably the Central Security riot control troops, which escalated
during the runoff of November 26. State violence was selectively
employed; some NDP candidates received more help than others. The
most egregious incidents took place in the Delta town of Damanhour,
even though there were more fatalities in Alexandria.
By the third
round, the regime was resorting -- again, only in selected
constituencies -- to closing polling stations altogether, on the
grounds that “disruptive elements” were causing violence. According
to eyewitnesses, election monitors, judges, and independent and
opposition press reports, violence was being caused either by hired
goons or voters responding to attacks by Central Security troops. In
the meantime, the state press -- which since the presidential
election had begun to paint a fairer picture of opposition politics
-- adopted the Interior Ministry’s official stance that the violence
was mostly caused by supporters of the Muslim Brothers. In the words
of a representative Interior Ministry statement: “The incidents of
violence witnessed during the election were the product of various
candidates, in particular Islamists, and the strict neutrality of
the security forces, so strict that they were even accused of
‘passive neutrality.’ These incidents required that security forces
respond sternly to restore order and secure the electoral process….
[Our warnings] went unheeded by various candidates and their
supporters, in particular Islamists, who insisted on abusing the
unprecedented climate of freedom which the country is
witnessing.”
Although
independent newspapers, particularly al-Masri al-Yawm, were reporting daily on violations
ignored by the state media, it was one account that finally blew the
lid off the official story. In its November 24 edition,
al-Masri al-Yawm carried a front-page article by Noha
al-Zeiny, a legal officer who supervised the Damanhour election.
Zeiny told of the many procedural and other violations carried out
by the NDP and security forces. According to Hisham Kassem, the
newspaper’s publisher, her article had to be reprinted for three
consecutive days because issues were selling out so quickly. The
paper subsequently increased its print run and received many letters
by other whistleblowers wanting to give their testimony. The article
also prompted a statement, signed by 120 judges, attesting that the
violations described by Zeiny were common in other constituencies.
Although the
third-round runoff on December 8, during which at least eight people
were reported killed in altercations with security forces, would
prove that a climate of violence and intimidation had taken over the
elections, Zeiny’s whistleblower article was the tipping point in
public opinion. Magdi Mehanna, the liberal columnist in al-Masri
al-Yawm, concluded that
“whatever the result of the parliamentary elections, it is now clear
that the violence and bias of the security forces have seriously
dampened political reform in Egypt.”
A RULING PARTY
IN CRISIS?
On the surface,
the NDP has emerged yet again as the dominant party in Parliament,
with 316 seats, or about 73 percent of the total. This
super-majority not only allows the NDP to pass any law it wants
(assuming party discipline), but also gives it enough votes to
approve constitutional amendments, lift the parliamentary immunity
of individual MPs and empower the executive branch to approve major
contracts (particularly defense contracts), among other
prerogatives. Whatever is planned for the “reform” process in 2006,
then, will presumably be under the firm control of the
NDP.
Technically,
however, the ruling party lost the elections. Exactly as in the 2000
legislative elections, NDP candidates only obtained 38 percent of
the seats -- in other words, only 149 out of 444 NDP candidates
actually prevailed in their respective races. The remaining 167
seats belong to NDP members who were not selected as official
candidates but ran nonetheless as “independents.” The irony is that,
for several years, the revamped NDP of Gamal Mubarak had claimed
that it would no longer tolerate “rebels” challenging its favorites.
Gamal had also himself insisted on the need to bring new blood into
the party that would appeal to voters more than the entrenched
apparatchiks.
In the runup to
the election, the NDP made a big show of its democratic and
scientific candidate selection process, even requiring prospective
candidates to take an exam to determine their suitability for
office. In reality, a small cabal of party leaders -- from both the
new and old guards -- handpicked the slate. In some respects, the
“new NDP” stuck to its promises: when Husni Mubarak, in his capacity
as party president, announced the NDP’s list on October 13, 136 of
the party’s 444 candidates were new faces, something party leaders
pointed to as proof of their seriousness about internal democracy.
But these claims were belied by frequent reports in the independent
press of disagreements among senior party leaders over which
candidates to pick. Later, during the elections, there followed
accusations that some members of the old guard were backing rebel
“independents” against the party’s official candidates.
The problem
became obvious in the Qasr al-Nil district in central Cairo, where
the incumbent Hossam Badrawi, often considered one of the few true
liberals in the Gamal Mubarak camp, was defeated by “independent”
Hisham Mustafa Khalil. Badrawi had been one of the most vocal
advocates of barring independents from rejoining the party before
the election, and even engaged in a public spat with party spokesman
Muhammad Kamal over the issue. He is believed to be disliked by the
old guard, which was rumored to have backed Khalil, and is one of
the few NDP members to talk openly of the need to remove what he
says are “corrupt” elements of the ruling party.
“It was my
opinion that we should not allow the independents back, even if it
meant fewer seats,” said Abd al-Moneim Said, a political scientist
and a pro-reform member of the Policies Secretariat -- the NDP’s
“think tank.” “That would have made the NDP smaller but much
stronger and more appealing to other political forces, with which it
could have made a coalition.” That sentiment was echoed by key
figures in the Egyptian intellectual establishment, such as
influential al-Ahram
columnist Salama Ahmad Salama. But it has largely been ignored by
the leaders of the party’s old guard, notably Secretary-General
Safwat al-Sharif, who led the effort to draw the independents back
into the fold -- in some cases, without even asking for their
permission beforehand. For the first time, some who ran as
independents have said they will not rejoin the
party.
This issue
clearly divided the reformist camp of the NDP, many of whom are now
grumbling about being ignored by the party’s leadership. Yet in the
elections, it tended to be the old guard, who are associated with
the party’s reputation for corruption, who lost. The 2005
parliamentary elections saw the fall, among others, of senior NDP
members such as Ahmad Rashed, the dean of Alexandria University,
Yusuf Wali, once a powerful minister of agriculture, and Amin
Mubarak, a relative of the president. Official NDP candidates won no
seats in three governorates (Suez, Ismailiyya and Matruh) and very
few in three others (Sohag, Dahqaliyya and Qina). More generally,
the 2005 elections have seen the entry of first-time politicians to
the People’s Assembly: 77.5 percent of elected MPs are new arrivals,
with only 98 incumbents reelected. The vast majority of those who
lost were NDP members.
Overall, the
performance of the NDP in the 2005 elections suggests that little
has changed since 2000. Although new bodies such as the Policies
Secretariat have attracted a few genuine liberals, the political
machine remains in the hands of a sclerotic elite. The NDP, in other
words, remains mostly a party of opportunists who join it for access
to state resources and regime networks. Gamal Mubarak’s purported
efforts at “party building,” hailed in the past three annual party
conferences and in the aftermath of the presidential election, have
been revealed as hollow. The younger Mubarak’s role is now a central
problem, as it is unlikely that the NDP will ever evolve into a real
party as long as it is considered by the regime to be an extension
of the presidency. This is most clearly evident in the fact that key
personalities responsible for the elections (from both the old and
new guards) are expected to remain in place despite their poor
performance.
TRIUMPH OF THE MUSLIM
BROTHERS
The Muslim
Brotherhood’s success at the ballot box does not merely reflect the
growing popularity of the Islamist group. It also marks a
fundamental change in the Brotherhood’s strategy; the group is now
working toward active political participation, rather than merely
seeking to survive. In a January 2, 2005 interview with al-Masri
al-Yawm, Supreme Guide Akif all
but endorsed the reelection of Mubarak, even invoking the Qur’anic
principle of wilayat al-amr, which says that Muslims should obey their
leader. That spring, a rift seemed to be widening between Akif’s
cautious older generation of Brothers and the more assertive “middle
generation” who made inroads into professional syndicates and
Parliament in the 1980s and 1990s.
The assertive
tendency won out. While other parties focused on the presidential
election, the Muslim Brotherhood, its network of supporters and
campaigners out of jail, set about building grassroots support for
the legislative contests. As analyst Mohammed El-Sayed Said noted,
the group began lavishing money on charity and social projects
during the month of Ramadan, a few weeks before voting commenced.
Although, as Akif pointed out, the Brotherhood competed in fewer
than 170 constituencies, it put up a vigorous fight wherever it
campaigned. It is a testament to the group’s popularity and
organizational skills that it managed to win 12 seats in the third
round, despite the security forces’ closure of polling stations and
targeting of Brothers for arrest. By the end of the balloting, Akif
claimed, at least 1,300 of the group’s supporters had been
detained.
The
Brotherhood’s attention to planning went beyond electioneering. As
it became clear that the next People’s Assembly would contain a
large Islamist contingent, the Brotherhood launched a media
offensive to assuage fears that it has hostile intentions toward
secularists and Christians. The campaign came partly in response to
wild alarmism in much of the Egyptian press (state-owned, opposition
and independent), as well as concerns voiced by prominent Copts,
notably intellectual Milad Hanna’s prediction, in the quasi-official
daily al-Ahram, that many
wealthy Copts would leave Egypt rather than accept a
Brotherhood-dominated government. Brotherhood spokesmen appeared for
the first time on Egyptian state television, as well as on pan-Arab
satellite channels, and published editorials in the Arab and
international press, seeking to reassure the world, as the November
23 Guardian headline
put it, that there is “no need to be afraid of us.” In these
interviews and articles, senior Brothers repeated again and again
that they are committed to the democratic process and want to focus
on political reform, rather than the Islamization of
Egypt.
A meeting with
the press to introduce the Brotherhood’s 88 new MPs began with a
Qur’anic recitation, but then moved to chants of “Reform!” The
guests of honor were Aziz Sidqi, a former prime minister who has
formed a nominally secular reform movement with the Brotherhood, and
Rafiq Habib, a Coptic politician formerly associated with the
post-Islamist al-Wasat movement. Akif told those gathered that he
would instruct the MPs to push for democratic reforms, chiefly
reducing the powers of the presidency and placing a term limit on
the head of state. Most strikingly, he also announced in an
interview with the independent weekly al-Dustur that he will soon seek to modify the
Brotherhood’s internal regulations to limit the term served by the
supreme guide to four or five years, renewable once. The supreme
guide currently enjoys a lifetime appointment.
Brotherhood
leaders have also stated unambiguously, for the first time, that
they seek to formalize their political role by creating, after a
change in current legislation, a political party that would exist
separately from the traditional da‘wa (proselytizing and charity) functions of
the organization. Confirming what many long suspected, the 2005
elections have enthroned the Brotherhood as Egypt’s second political
force and only truly effective party.
BIPOLARITY
The secular
opposition parties introduced after the abolition of the
single-party system in 1977 were not set up to perform well, as they
are led by aging, uncharismatic autocrats and lack the money and
organizational skills of the NDP and the Brothers. The scant voter
enthusiasm for established opposition leaders was clear after the
presidential election, when Numan Gumaa, head of the liberal Wafd
Party, finished third with less than 3 percent of the vote, despite
being described by the state press as Mubarak’s only serious
opponent.
The Ghad Party
headed by former Wafdist politician Ayman Nour might have been an
exception if half of its senior leadership had not rebelled,
apparently at the behest of the NDP, throwing the party into
disarray. Nour, who is currently on trial on trumped-up election
fraud charges and is likely to receive a prison sentence on December
24, lost his seat in Cairo’s Bab al-Shar‘iyya district. The NDP
clearly devoted much effort to humiliating Nour, appointing a former
police general as its candidate in his district to intimidate Nour
supporters, and, according to reports by election monitors,
illegally registering over 2,000 pro-NDP voters on the day of the
election.
Other prominent
oppositionists were also defeated, including Khalid Muhi al-Din,
leader of the “legal left” Tagammu Party and Munir Fakhri Abd
al-Nour, head of the Wafdist parliamentary delegation. Only the Wafd
managed to keep its strength in parliament, with six seats, while
the Tagammu won two and the rebel faction of Ghad and the Ahrar
Party each garnered one. For the first time since its formation in
1977, the Nasserist Party did not win a single seat, although a
breakaway faction, Karama (which is still in the process of forming
a party), did win two seats. Although to a less spectacular extent
than the Brotherhood, legal opposition candidates also suffered from
fraud and election-day thuggery.
Alongside the
rise of the Brotherhood, these paltry results -- a total of 12 seats
for the legal opposition, Karama included -- underline the need for
reform inside the opposition parties. Abd al-Nour of the Wafd has
already been dismissed from the party after he called for Gumaa’s
resignation. He is believed to have the backing of other senior
Wafdists, who have protested his sacking. Nasserist leader Dia’
al-Din Da’ud has announced that he will not stand again in the
party’s internal elections, which were brought forward as rumors of
major splits in the party emerged. Other parties are likely to see
similar clashes along ideological and generational lines in the
coming months.
The implosion
of the secular opposition, the likely demise of Ghad if Nour is
imprisoned, and resentment among NDP liberals has led to renewed
speculation that a new party gathering reformists from across the
political spectrum could coalesce. In light of the disappointment
with the NDP’s handling of the election and secular Muslim and
Coptic trepidation about the Brotherhood, such a party could unite
the opposition more effectively than the halfhearted attempt at a
“National Front” before the election, particularly if this party
could draw the support of leading businessmen who are unhappy with
the NDP. The travails of Ayman Nour throughout 2005 have sent a
chilling message to would-be liberal leaders that the regime will
not tolerate the emergence of a populist-liberal alternative;
however, a personality of greater stature than Nour’s could yet
emerge from the debris of the legal opposition.
For the time
being, however, the 2005 parliamentary elections have created a
bipolar dynamic in Egyptian politics pitting the NDP against the
Muslim Brotherhood both under the rotunda of the People’s Assembly
and in the marketplace of clientelism and patronage. Both sides are
bidding for the reformist mantle, but in light of the NDP’s recent
conduct and the Brotherhood’s efforts to moderate its discourse, the
Islamists are currently making the more convincing case. For Egypt’s
secular-minded leftists and liberals, this is the most dangerous
scenario: their place as a nominal alternative to the status quo has
been usurped, leaving them on the outside looking in.
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