http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/fareed-zakaria-arab-springs-hits-and-misses/2013/01/30/fc72dcc2-6b15-11e2-af53-7b2b2a7510a8_story.html?wpisrc=nl_opinions

Arab Spring’s hits and misses

By Fareed Zakaria, Thursday, January 31, 1:49 AM 
The chaos at the second anniversary of the Tahrir Square uprising is only the 
latest and most vivid illustration that Egypt’s revolution is going off the 
rails. It has revived talk about the failure of the Arab Spring and even some 
nostalgia for the old order. But Arab dictators such as Hosni Mubarak could not 
have held onto power without even greater troubles; look at Syria. Events in 
the Middle East the past two years underscore that constitutions are as vital 
as elections and that good leadership is crucial in these transitions.

Compare the differences between Egypt and Jordan. At the start of the Arab 
Spring, it appeared that Egypt had responded to the will of its people, had 
made a clean break with its tyrannical past and was ushering in a new birth of 
freedom. Jordan, by contrast, responded with a few personnel changes, some 
promises to study the situation and talk of reform. 

But then Egypt started going down the wrong path, and Jordan made a set of wise 
choices. 

Put simply, Egypt chose democratization before liberalization. Elections became 
the most important element of the new order, used in legitimizing the new 
government, electing a president and ratifying the new constitution. As a 
result, the best organized force in Egypt, the Muslim Brotherhood, swept into 
power, even though, on the first ballot, only 25 percent of voters chose its 
presidential nominee, Mohamed Morsi. The Brotherhood was also able to dominate 
the drafting of the constitution. The document had many defects, including its 
failure to explicitly protect women’s rights — only four of the constitutional 
assembly’s 85 members were women — and language that seems to enshrine the 
traditional “character” of the Egyptian family. It also weakens protections for 
religious minorities such as the Bahais, who already face persecution. 

Some of its provisions ban blasphemy and insult and allow for media censorship 
in the name of national security. These are all ways to give the government 
unlimited powers, which the Muslim Brotherhood has used. More journalists have 
been persecuted for insulting Morsi in his six-month presidency than during the 
nearly 30-year reign of Mubarak. In November, Morsi declared that his 
presidential decrees were above judicial review. 

In Jordan, by contrast, the king did not rush to hold elections (and was widely 
criticized for his deliberate pace). Instead, he appointed a council to propose 
changes to the constitution. The members consulted many people in Jordan and in 
the West to determine how to make the country’s political system more 
democratic and inclusive. A series of important changes were approved in 
September 2011. They transferred some of the king’s powers to parliament and 
established an independent commission to administer elections and a court to 
oversee the constitutionality of legislation. 

The commission recently got its first use. The election was boycotted by 
Jordan’s Muslim Brotherhood on the grounds that the changes were too small and 
that power still resided with the king. But 70 percent of eligible voters 
registered, and 56 percent turned out at the polls, the highest turnout in the 
region. Many critics of the king and government were elected; 12 percent of the 
winners were opposition Islamist candidates. Thanks to a quota the commission 
set, 12 percent of the new parliament’s members are female. King Abdullah II 
retains ultimate authority, but the new system is clearly a step in the 
transition to a constitutional monarchy. 

Morocco has taken the same route as Jordan. It enacted constitutional reforms 
in 2011. In the elections that followed, Morocco’s Islamist Party won 107 of 
the 395 seats in parliament and formed a government. The head of this 
government, Abdelilah Benkirane, while a feisty critic of the West, has also 
spoken firmly about protecting the rights of minorities, explicitly including 
Jews, who he noted have lived in Morocco for centuries and are an integral part 
of the country. 

The Arab world’s two largest experiments in democracy, Iraq and Egypt, have, 
unfortunately, poor choices in common. Both placed elections ahead of 
constitutions and popular participation ahead of individual rights. Both have 
had as their first elected leaders strongmen with Islamist backgrounds who have 
no real dedication to liberal democracy. The results have been the 
establishment of “illiberal democracy” in Iraq and the danger of a similar 
system in Egypt. 

The best role models for the region might well be two small monarchies. Jordan 
and Morocco have gone the opposite route, making measured reforms and 
liberalizing their existing systems. The monarchies have chosen evolution over 
revolution. So far, it seems the better course.


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