http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2011/1063/eg6.htm
8 - 14 September 2011
Issue No. 1063
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
Rallying religion
Islamist forces are strongly gearing up for the upcoming parliamentary 
elections, reports Amani Maged 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Against the backdrop of the Islamists' political jockeying and their 
preparations for the forthcoming parliamentary elections, people are wondering 
how much weight they really do carry in society and how equipped they are for 
the campaigns. The public is also asking how the Islamists stand on the 
electoral law and the delineation of voting districts, whether they will 
participate in the Friday of Returning to Course demonstrations tomorrow, 9 
September, and how likely it is that they will come together as a single 
electoral coalition against the liberals and secularists.

Both Islamist and liberal forces are of the opinion that the current provisions 
for the parliamentary elections, which will combine the electoral list and 
individual candidacy systems, favour the remnants of the once ruling National 
Democratic Party (NDP), who stand to gain some 30 per cent of the seats in the 
People's Assembly and Shura Council. Yet, as strongly as they might object to 
these provisions, Islamist forces -- the Freedom and Justice Party, the Salafi 
parties and the parties of Al-Gamaa Al-Islamiya and the Jihad -- have announced 
that they will not take part in the million-man march on Friday. 

Meanwhile, the Islamists are busily gearing up for the elections. The Freedom 
and Justice Party, the political wing of the Muslim Brotherhood, was the first 
to announce that it is all set for the campaigns. In an interview with Al-Ahram 
Weekl y, Ahmed Abu Baraka, a leading member of the party, said that 504 people 
are running as Freedom and Justice Party candidates for the People's Assembly 
and another 390 names have been proposed as Shura Council candidates. Out of 
these, the party will select 252 and 195 candidates, respectively, or a total 
of 447 candidates for both houses of parliament. Abu Baraka confirmed his 
party's previously declared commitment not to contend more than 50 per cent of 
the seats in parliament. The candidates themselves will be selected on the 
basis of a set of stringent criteria such as competence, discipline, previous 
service in parliament and political record. Abu Baraka added that while 
Brotherhood members who were MPs in the previous People's Assembly will be on 
the candidates' list, it has yet to be determined whether Freedom and Justice 
leaders themselves will be fielded in the polls. What is certain is that a 
number of well-known, popular and influential Muslim Brotherhood figures will 
top the party's 'A List' of nominees, which will be announced in mid-September. 

Another party with an Islamic frame of reference, the Labour Party, will be 
fielding candidates in all governorates. Several days ago, it announced that it 
would join the Democratic Coalition for Egypt and that it had prepared a 
preliminary list of People's Assembly candidates which consists of 55 nominees 
to be fielded in 12 governorates. 

Al-Nour, a recently formed Salafi party, has also declared itself ready for the 
elections. Yosri Hamad, a member of the party's central committee, has welcomed 
the official announcement of nominees at the end of the month. The timing is 
"very appropriate and it was expected," he said. 

Al-Gamaa Al-Islamiya and the Jihad are also in the process of drawing up a list 
of candidates, but neither organisation has revealed details apart from the 
fact that they plan to concentrate their candidates in Upper Egypt where their 
prospects are stronger. The Salafis, for their part, are likely to avoid 
putting too much effort in the Alexandria governorate where they would 
encounter stiff competition from the Muslim Brotherhood, which is more tightly 
organised and more experienced in electoral campaigns. 

Some observers believe that the Islamists will try to form an electoral 
alliance, especially in view of the anticipated competition between them and 
the secularist trends, on the one hand, and the general consensus that has 
arisen among the various Islamist trends since the revolution, on the other. 
Ali Abdel-Aal, an expert on Islamist movements, cites a number of issues with 
respect to which Islamist forces in Egypt have demonstrated a strong desire to 
unify their positions and coordinate their efforts. Prime among them are their 
support in favour of the constitutional amendments in the March referendum; the 
demand to retain Article 2 of the former constitution; their opposition to 
postponing parliamentary elections and to drafting a constitution first; 
turning out for a mass demonstration on 29 July; their opposition to 
"supra-constitutional" principles; and their reservations on the Al-Azhar 
document in this regard, even though they accepted it in principle. Mounting 
challenges both at home and abroad are also compelling them to join forces. As 
their opponents are summoning the resolve to unify and form electoral 
coalitions against the Islamists, Islamist youth, in particular, are urging 
unity of ranks and united stances, although they are simultaneously conscious 
of international anxieties concerning the prospect of a significant Islamist 
majority in the forthcoming parliament. 

With post-revolutionary freedom that offered Islamist forces new horizons for 
political involvement, dozens of pages have emerged on social networking sites 
such as Facebook urging Islamist forces to set aside their differences and 
unify ranks. Meanwhile, on the ground, the recently formed Coordinating Body 
for Islamist Political Action consists of young Islamist men and women 
dedicated to a single goal -- to promote a formula for consensus among all 
organisations and entities with an Islamic frame of reference. According to the 
founders, the realisation of this goal is a necessary preliminary to the 
creation of unified Islamist lists for the upcoming elections and, at a broader 
level, the development of an Islamist roadmap for political action and 
mechanisms to stimulate and enhance the role of affiliates to the Islamist 
trend. 

To most, if not all, Islamists, the common ground between their various groups 
is far greater than the differences that separate them. They share an 
ideological outlook that takes as its primary authority the Islamic scriptures 
(the Quran and the Sunna) and they largely converge on a general vision and 
common goals and aspirations, even if they differ on subsidiary issues. Over 
the past six decades in Egypt, secularist regimes, which largely regarded 
Islamists as a security threat, formed the chief obstacle to collective 
Islamist action. Now that the dictatorships have fallen, Islamists have an open 
field to communicate, consult and work with each other on the issues that most 
concern them. 

This is not to suggest that Islamist efforts to unify and join forces are a 
product of the revolution. There were numerous instances of common cause long 
before this. For example, regardless of how some of their priorities may have 
differed with those of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Salafis supported Muslim 
Brotherhood candidates in the elections of the occupational syndicates and 
student federations. In an essay 'The Salafist position with respect to 
parliamentary elections', Sheikh Mohamed Ismail El-Muqaddam wrote, "Should a 
person take part in elections in order to vote for a Muslim Brotherhood 
candidate we would not reproach him. Rather we would respect the doctrinal 
differences on this matter, especially if that candidate were competing against 
another who is hostile to Islam." He added, "there may be some good in these 
[parliamentary] assemblies, which would please us considerably. So let them 
[the Muslim Brothers] try to promote reform through these assemblies."

Many leaders and prominent figures from across the Islamist spectrum have also 
been urging Islamists to join forces. Foremost among them are Sheikh Mohamed 
Hassan, Sheikh Mohamed Abdel-Maqsoud, Sheikh Ahmed El-Naqib, Safwat Higazi, 
Mohamed Yosri Ibrahim, Jihadist leaders Aboud and Tareq El-Zomor and 
Abdel-Rahman El-Barr. The Salafi proselytiser Sheikh Ahmed El-Naqib has 
described the Muslim Brothers as "the closest people to us and their victory, 
in fact, would be a victory for Islam." In a similar spirit, Sheikh Mohamed 
Hassan said, in reference to the forthcoming parliamentary elections, "the 
persons who would be the best candidates are the Muslim Brothers in view of 
their political expertise. There should be solidarity with them on the part of 
affiliates to the Salafist school."

One Muslim Brotherhood official, at least, is confident of the support of the 
Salafis and members of Al-Gamaa Al-Islamiya. Ali Omran, a member of the Freedom 
and Justice Party's administrative bureau in Minya, said, "The Muslim 
Brotherhood's relationship with the Salafis and Al-Gamaa Al-Islamiya have 
always been strong, before the revolution and after. They are our cherished 
friends and they will support us and stand by our side in any elections."

Still, the scholar Abdel-Aal has some reservations. He believes that tensions 
may arise between some of the trends, especially in the event that several 
Islamist candidates from different groups become electoral rivals and partisan 
feelings prevail. It is precisely to avert such a scenario that leading 
Islamist figures have urged closer communication and coordination to ensure 
that no electoral district has Muslim Brotherhood, Salafi or Al-Gamaa 
Al-Islamiya candidates running against each other.


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