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Egyptian parliamentary election (Image: Middle East Monitor) |
Reuters - CAIRO:
Turnout was so low in the first round of Egypt's parliamentary elections, that
satirist Bassem Youssef derided it as an ingenious strategy to show the world
Egypt had rid itself of its notorious overcrowding.
Empty polling
stations highlight disillusionment with Egypt's chaotic political transition
but could have the surprise effect of bolstering President Abdel Fattah
al-Sisi's authority by suggesting that, four years after they revolted against
one-man-rule, Egyptians still look to the presidency as the main seat of power.
Voting in the
first of two election rounds took place on Sunday and Monday but lack of
interest from voters, even many who support the former general, could be
interpreted as a green light to consolidate his own rule.
"This adds
to his mandate and takes away from that of the parliament. This is part of this
depoliticalization process within which Sisi rose to power. All in all, I don't
think he is a loser from what happened," said Amr Adly, non-resident
scholar at the Carnegie Middle East Center.
When the Tahrir
Square uprising ended Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule in February 2011, critics
likened him to a modern-day pharaoh, lamenting the series of strongmen that
have risen from the military since 1952 to lead the most populous Arab country.
The democratic
transition was meant to widen political participation, increase oversight of
the presidency and ensure Egyptians would never be ruled by one man again.
Fast forward 16
months and the first freely-elected main chamber, then dominated by the Muslim
Brotherhood, was dissolved by a court order, leaving Egypt without a parliament
ever since.
As military
chief, Sisi ousted President Mohamed Mursi, a Brotherhood member, a year later,
in 2013, after mass protests against his year in office. He banned Egypt's
oldest Islamist movement and launched the bloodiest crackdown on dissent in its
modern history.
Sisi won backing
for Mursi's ouster from other opposition forces with a roadmap to democracy that
promised parliamentary elections in six months. But critics say Egypt lost its
way when it decided to hold presidential elections first, putting Sisi rather
than parliament in control of the democratic transition.
Counting the votes at Egyptian parliamentary election (Image: Ahram Online) |
In the absence
of a parliament, Sisi has wielded legislative power, passing several hundred
laws by decree, including some that curb the right to protest and widen the
remit of military courts. The new legislature is required by the constitution
to approve this within two weeks, putting pressure on lawmakers to rubber stamp
the lot to avoid a constitutional crisis.
Official figures
have yet to be published for this week's poll, and another round of voting
takes place on Nov. 22-23. But a low turnout could leave the legislature,
whatever its makeup, without a popular mandate to overturn Sisi's laws.
Sisi won 97
percent of the presidential vote in mid-2014 with an official turnout of 47.5
percent after elections were extended to a third day following a slow start.
"If
parliament comes into session with such a low turnout, the authorities could
claim it would never have popular legitimacy comparable to Sisi's," said
H.A. Hellyer, Associate Fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in
London.
"Parliamentary
elections were never a priority... They have to take place, but this political
dispensation was always more interested in the presidential and constitutional
votes."
STILL-BORN
PARLIAMENT
Approved by
popular referendum in early 2014 -- after Mursi's ouster but before Sisi won a
presidential vote -- Egypt's constitution envisages the transition leading to a
semi-presidential system with an empowered parliament.
On paper,
Egypt’s new legislative chamber has the authority to impeach the president,
question the prime minister and withdraw its confidence in him. It must approve
all laws.
Yet ahead of
elections, speculation was rife that the new parliament would revise the
constitution to curb some of those powers and hand prerogatives back to the
presidency. Any constitutional change would have to be approved by popular
referendum.
Nevertheless, a
low turnout could bolster politicians who have suggested rolling back the
remaining accomplishments of the 2011 revolt.
With the main
opposition Muslim Brotherhood branded a terrorist organization and its leaders
in jail alongside youth activists at the forefront of the 2011 revolt, ballot
papers offered voters a multitude of names but little genuine choice.
The legislature
will comprise 568 elected members - 448 entering as individuals and 120 through
winner-takes-all lists.
Critics say the
emphasis on individuals makes it more likely for figures with cash and
connections to dominate, much as they did under Mubarak. Indeed many members of
Mubarak's now-defunct National Democratic Party (NDP)are campaigning once more.
Brotherhood
supporters have boycotted, as have many secular government critics. A list of
liberal and socialist parties that would have been the main opposition choice
eventually withdrew, leaving the field dominated by Sisi loyalists.
Preliminary
results suggest For the Love of Egypt, a loyalist coalition led by a former
intelligence officer, has already picked up 60 list seats.
The lack of
interest, particularly from young people who comprise the majority of Egypt's
population, contrasted with the long queues of the 2011-12 polls that followed
Mubarak's exit from power. Polling centers were also busier during the
constitutional referendum and the presidential vote.
So uninspired
were younger voters that #badalmatantakhib or #insteadofvoting trended on
Twitter, with users posting Tweets such as: "Don't waste your time, you
can use these two hours to learn how to make macaroni and bechamel sauce."
Others said
voting in repeated elections since 2011 had made little difference to lives
dogged by inflation and joblessness.
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