Egypt's Shura Council |
Egypt’s Shura Council (Upper House of Parliament) which is currently
responsible for all the sphere of legislation has finally approved the new
elections’ law regarding the House of Representatives (former People’s
Assembly, the Lower House of Parliament).
After the controversial electoral law recently issued by Shura Council
and then rejected by Egypt’s High Constitutional Court due to its
unconstitutionality the Upper House of Egypt’s Parliament created the new
document which regulates the performance and election of the members of the
House of Representatives, their number, also defines the electoral districts
and the conditions which allow the citizens to participate in the parliamentary
elections. It also includes some voting regulations.
The debates regarding the new electoral law lasted three days, and the
members of the Shura Council finally voted in favor of the new electoral
regulation. The new draft of the elections’ law was approved by the Upper House
of Parliament and will be sent next to Egypt’s High Constitutional Court,
according to the new Constitution’s terms. If this law will be approved by HCC,
Egypt’s President Mohamed Morsy will be able to set the new dates for the
parliamentary elections.
I would like to share here Ahram Online article regarding this issue
which includes a very detailed reports about the new law. The article was
written by Gamal Essam El-Din and originally posted here.
Egypt's Shura Council approves new House of Representatives law
Parliament's upper house approves new law governing election/performance
of Egypt's House of Representatives, defining electoral districts, spelling out
voting regulations and stating who can – and can't – contest upcoming polls
Gamal Essam El-Din , Thursday 11 Apr 2013
After a three-day marathon of debates, the Islamist-led Shura Council
(the upper house Egypt's parliament, currently endowed with legislative powers)
finally voted in favour of a new government-drafted law regulating the election
and performance of the House of
Representatives (the lower house of Egypt's parliament, formerly known as the
People's Assembly).
Ahmed Fahmi, Shura Council chairman and leading member of the Muslim
Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party (FJP), said on Thursday that "the
two laws regulating the election of the House of Representatives and the
exercise of political rights will be sent to the High Constitutional Court
(HCC) next Sunday to be revised in accordance with Article 177 of the new
constitution."
If approved by the HCC, President Mohamed Morsi will be free to set a
date for upcoming parliamentary elections. The HCC is allowed 45 days to revise
the law, according to Egypt's new national charter.
The new House of Representatives law was first approved in principle in
a plenary Shura Council session on 26 March. It was then referred to the
council's legislative and constitutional affairs committee, which debated each
of its articles and reviewed amendments proposed by MPs.
The 44-article law was generally approved on Wednesday night after MPs
and government officials reached agreement on a new map of Egypt's electoral
districts.
Electoral districts & voting systems
According to the amended Article 1, the incoming House will include 546
MPs, to be elected via direct secret ballot. It was initially proposed by the
Supreme Electoral Commission (SEC) that six seats be added for Egyptians living
abroad. This proposal, however, was rejected by MPs and the justice ministry.
According to Sobhi Saleh, a leading FJP official and a member of the
legislative and constitutional committee, "after the elimination of the
six seats [for expats], the number of House deputies will stand at 546, two
thirds of whom will be elected on the basis of party, while the remaining third
will be elected via an individual candidacy system."
Saleh explained that 49 districts would be subject to a party-list
system, producing 364 deputies, while 91 districts would be reserved for
individual candidacies, producing 182 independent MPs. "This puts the
total number of elected deputies at 546, the most in Egypt's parliamentary
history," he said.
In former president Hosni Mubarak's 2005-2010 parliament, the number of
MPs stood at 454. This rose to 518 after a 64-seat quota was established for female
MPs in Egypt's 2010 parliament, which was dissolved after Mubarak's departure
in February 2011.
Saleh said the above figures were in line with Article 331 of the
constitution, which states that two thirds of the seats in parliament must be
elected via a party-list system, while the remaining third is to be reserved
for candidates running as independents – with the stipulation that half of the
total elected deputies represent farmers and workers.
Article 2 also states that "a 'farmer' is someone who has been
involved in agricultural activities for at least ten years, while a 'worker' is
someone employed by others against payment of a salary."
According to Saleh, the council's legislative and constitutional affairs
committee agreed that, in line with the HCC's instructions, Article 3 should
state that MPs who change their classification (from worker to farmer, or vice
versa) or their political affiliation
(from independent to party
affiliate, or vice versa) must be stripped of their parliamentary membership.
Female candidates
Article 3 (paragraph 4), meanwhile, was a highly contentious one. Islamist MPs objected that the law had
compelled political parties to include female candidates on the first half of
their candidate lists. The article was therefore amended to state that
"each party list must include one female candidate."
Non-Islamist council members asserted that "Islamists were able to
impose their will on the article; this represents an injustice to women."
Rami Lakah, an appointed Christian MP, expressed fears that "the
number of women and Copts in the upcoming parliament will be very insignificant
because some insist on marginalising these two social segments."
Mohamed Mohieddin, a member of the liberal Ghad Party, said that
"placing women on the first half of parties' candidate lists was
guaranteed to boost the number of female MPs in the coming parliament to at
least 27."
In response, Salah Abdel-Maaboud, representative of the
ultra-conservative Salafist Nour Party, asked: "If secular parties are
really sincere about strengthening women's political role, why don't they take
the initiative and place female nominees on the first half of their candidate
lists?"
Military service
Article 5 of the draft law also caused controversy. The article, which
prevents anyone who failed to perform military service for security reasons
from standing in elections, was rejected by the HCC while the court was in the
process of reviewing an overall elections law passed in February. The HCC
stated that the article must be formulated so as to be brought into line with
the new constitution.
The Muslim Brotherhood and its Islamist allies objected, however, saying
that "those who failed to perform military service under the former regime
for security reasons must be allowed to stand in [post-revolution]
elections." Saleh, for his part, argued: "It is in line with the
ideals of the 25 January Revolution that anyone who suffered from the
repressive practices of the former regime and suffered arbitrary arrest should
be allowed – in an age of freedom – to stand in elections."
Article 5, detailing conditions for candidate registration, was finally
worded to state that "anyone who aims to stand in elections must have
performed obligatory military service; or must have been exempted from
performing it; or was excluded from performing it, unless this exclusion was
based on a final court order and caused damage to public interests or tampered
with state security in accordance with the law."
This text, however, was rejected by government representative Omar
El-Sherif, who argued that it did not adhere to the HCC's orders.
The same article also bans leading officials of Mubarak's now-defunct
National Democratic Party (NDP) from standing in elections. In accordance with
the orders of the HCC, NDP MPs who were members of the last two Mubarak-era
parliaments (2005 and 2010) will be the only ones barred from contesting the
polls.
Religious campaign slogans
Another contentious point is Article 13 of the law, which was amended
under Islamist pressure to lift a longstanding ban on the use of religious
electoral slogans. Along with the conditions stipulated by this article,
paragraph 2 had stated that candidates must "uphold national unity"
by refraining from using religious campaign slogans. It had also banned the use
of houses of worship for campaigning purposes.
Islamists, led by Sobhi, voted in favour of amending the article to
state that "candidates must uphold national unity by refraining from using
slogans that promote discrimination against citizens on the basis of religion,
gender or race." This text, however, was rejected by government
representative El-Sherif. It was also rejected by Coptic-Christian deputies,
who argued that lifting the ban on religious slogans would "inflame
sectarian strife."
"Islamist MPs should have learned a lesson from the recent sectarian
clashes in Al-Khosous and in Cairo to maintain the ban on religious
slogans," said Kamal Ramzy, an appointed Coptic MP.
Islamist representatives also tried to raise
MPs' monthly salaries from LE1,000 to LE10,000. Saleh, however, objected to
this, saying the proposed increase "would cost the state LE10 million per
year, and this would be unsuitable given Egypt's difficult economic
circumstances."
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