http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3291/egypts-polls-to-kick-off-amid-unrest-and-division


 Egypt's Polls to Kick Off Amid Unrest and
Division<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3291/egypts-polls-to-kick-off-amid-unrest-and-division>
0<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3291/egypts-polls-to-kick-off-amid-unrest-and-division#comments>
Nov
27 2011 by Gamal Essam
El-Din<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/contributors/44145>
[image: Listen to this page using
ReadSpeaker]<http://app.readspeaker.com/cgi-bin/rsent?customerid=5919&lang=en_us&readid=rscontent&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.jadaliyya.com%2Fpages%2Findex%2F3291%2Fegypts-polls-to-kick-off-amid-unrest-and-division>
 [image: [Campaign banners and signs for Egypt's first elections after 25
January 2011.]] [Campaign banners and signs for Egypt's first elections
after 25 January 2011.]

Egypt’s first post-Mubarak parliamentary polls open Monday amid severe
political divisions and street protests against the ruling Supreme Council
of Armed Forces (SCAF) and its embattled government.

The first stage of elections, which will last until 5 December, includes
nine governorates: Cairo, Alexandria, Fayyum, Assiut, Luxor, the Red Sea,
Port Said, Damietta and Kafr El-Sheikh. Of the 168 seats up for grabs in
the first round, 56 will go to independents and 112 to candidates running
on party lists.

*Click here to learn more about the election rules and
dates.<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3192/the-concise-idiots-guide-to-the-egyptian-elections>
*

Supreme Electoral Commission (SEC) Chairman Abdel-Moez Ibrahim announced on
26 November that the opening round would be supervised by more than 4,500
judges mandated with overseeing polling stations countrywide.

“The SEC is opposed to any kind of international monitoring of the Egyptian
elections,” clarified Ibrahim. “We informed the SCAF that this was against
Egypt’s national sovereignty and could never be accepted, but if foreign
monitors and media want to participate in supervising the voting process,
let them do so without any constraints."

For his part, SCAF head Field-Marshal Hussein Tantawi stressed that
“security and army forces have devised a plan for safeguarding polling
stations against any violent act.” He went on to predict that that ordinary
Egyptians “would play the greatest role in protecting polling stations and
turning out in big numbers, because this is the only path to
democratization and civilian rule.”

According to Ibrahim, more than 100,000 Egyptian expatriates living abroad
had cast ballots in recent days, out of a total of 350,000 who had
registered to vote at Egyptian embassies and consulates worldwide.

Although the SEC has not provided figures for the total number of
candidates contesting the first round, unofficial estimates suggest that
2,362 independents and 193 party-based candidates would be fighting it out
for the 168 seats.

Eligible voters in the first round account for some 35 per cent of the
total number of Egypt’s registered voters, estimated at 50 million.

Cairo and Alexandria are expected to see the most fiercely contested
electoral showdowns. Cairo is due to elect 54 MPs – 18 independents and 36
party-based – out of an estimated total of 1,539 candidates.

Alexandria, meanwhile, long viewed as an Islamist stronghold, will elect 24
MPs – eight independents and 16 party-based. In Egypt’s second city, 418
independents and 33 party-list candidates will compete for seats in the
assembly.

Polls will also be hotly contested in the governorate of Port Said, where
103 independents and 13 party-list candidates – of almost all political
stripes – will compete for available seats.

The Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party
(FJP)<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3154/freedom-and-justice-party>,
along with Salafist parties and the older secular parties, all hope to
secure seats in Cairo and Alexandria.

*Click here for more background on participating parties and
coalitions.<http://egypt.jadaliyya.com/>
*

Electoral campaigning by Islamist forces, however, has been negatively
affected by the recent flurry of protests against military rule in Cairo’s
Tahrir Square. The Islamists’ decision not to take part in the protests has
reportedly cost them some credibility among certain segments of the voting
public.

That leaders of Islamist and Salafist parties have issued fatwas
instructing Muslims not to vote for liberal candidates – who they have
denounced as “unbelievers” – has also reportedly adversely affected their
electoral prospects. “There were numerous press reports that Islamist
candidates had violated the law against using religious electoral slogans,
but we never received any official complaint on this issue,” said the SEC’s
Ibrahim.

He added that the current Tahrir Square protests had led Islamist forces,
led by the Brotherhood’s FJP, to exert pressure on the SCAF to hold
elections – which they are widely expected to sweep – on schedule and
without delay.

Cairo’s various electoral districts will see many new faces competing for a
place in the incoming parliament. The district that includes the south
Cairo areas of Helwan and Maadi is the largest, with 132 independents and
130 party-based candidates competing for 12 seats (two for independents and
ten for parties).

The most prominent independent candidates in this district include leftist
journalist Mostafa Bakri and human rights activist Nasser Amin. Party-based
lists, meanwhile, include Ziad Al-Eleimi, candidate for the
liberal-oriented Egyptian
Bloc<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3161/egyptian-bloc>;
Akmal Qortam for the newly-licensed Conservative
Party<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3163/meet-the-national-democratic-party-offshoots>;
and Al-Wafd Party <http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3155/al-wafd-party>’s
Mahmoud Al-Sakka.

In the district that includes east Cairo’s Nasr City and Heliopolis,
meanwhile, candidates include Asmaa Mahfouz, former member of the April 6
youth movement, and political analyst Amr
Hamzawy<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3189/amr-hamzaway>,
a founder of the liberal-oriented Egypt Freedom Party.

In Cairo’s Qasr Al-Nil district, which includes the flashpoint Tahrir
Square, Gamila Ismail, ex-wife of opposition leader Ayman Nour, will stand
as an independent. She is opposed by, among others, Al-Wafd
Party<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3155/al-wafd-party>member
Nihal Ahdi, who is running on an independent ticket.

The battle for Qasr Al-Nil’s party-based seats will pit the
FJP<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3154/freedom-and-justice-party>-led
Democratic 
Alliance<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3160/democratic-alliance-for-egypt>against
the Egyptian
Bloc <http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3161/egyptian-bloc>, Al-Wafd
Party <http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3155/al-wafd-party> and the
Reform and Development Party, along with the Salafists and Nasserists.
Democratic Alliance candidates include Al-Ahram political analyst Wahid
Abdel-Meguid and former Brotherhood MP Gamal Hanafi. Their competitors,
meanwhile, include Coptic tycoon Rami Lakah for the Reform and Development
Party, and actress Tayseer Fahmi for the “Revolution
Continues<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3150/revolution-continues-alliance>”
alliance.

In North Cairo’s El-Sahel district, meanwhile, Al-Ahram analyst Emad Gad
will run for the Egyptian Social Democratic
Party<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3158/egyptian-social-democratic-party>
.

In Alexandria, the FJP is fielding a handful of prominent former MPs, such
as Sobhi Saleh, Hamdi Hassan and Hussein Ibrahim. One of the most
hotly-contested races, however, will be that between reformist judge
Mahmoud Al-Khodeiri and construction magnate Tarek Talaat Mostafa, once a
leading member of Mubarak’s now-defunct National Democratic
Party<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3163/meet-the-national-democratic-party-offshoots>
.

Port Said, in which around 300 candidates will vie for only six seats, will
also feature a number of prominent personalities. These include George
Ishak, founder of the Kefaya pro-democracy movement; former MP Al-Badri
Farghali of the leftist Al-Tagammu
Party<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3157/national-progressive-unionist-(tagammu)-party>;
and former Brotherhood MP Akram Al-Shaer for the
FJP<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3154/freedom-and-justice-party>
.

In Damietta, where twelve seats are up for grabs, the battle between former
NDP deputies and new challengers is also expected to be fierce.
FJP<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3154/freedom-and-justice-party>candidates
in Damietta include former MPs Saber Abdel-Sadek and Mohamed
Kosbah. Al-Wasat
Party<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/3152/al-wasat-party>,
meanwhile, is fielding its deputy chairman, Essam Sultan. Former NDP
candidates for the district include Gamal Al-Zeiny and Omran Megahed.

In Kafr El-Sheikh, where 18 seats are being contested, stiff competition is
expected between former MP Mohamed Abdel-Alim and Brotherhood candidates in
the Fiwa district.


*[Developed in partnership with Ahram Online.]*


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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