NY Times
 
Islamists Say They Have Mandate in Egypt  Voting
 
 
By _DAVID D.  KIRKPATRICK_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/k/david_d_kirkpatrick/index.html?inline=nyt-per)
 
Published: November 30, 2011 

 
CAIRO — Islamists claimed a decisive victory on Wednesday as early election 
 results put them on track to win a dominant majority in _Egypt_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/egypt/index.h
tml?inline=nyt-geo) ’s first Parliament since the ouster of Hosni  Mubarak, 
the most significant step yet in the religious movement’s rise since  the 
start of the Arab Spring. 
 
The party formed by the _Muslim Brotherhood_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/m/m
uslim_brotherhood_egypt/index.html?inline=nyt-org) , Egypt’s mainstream 
Islamist group,  appeared to have taken 
about 40 percent of the vote, as expected. But a big  surprise was the 
strong showing of ultraconservative Islamists, called Salafis,  many of whom 
see 
most popular entertainment as sinful and reject women’s  participation in 
voting or public life.  
Analysts in the state-run news media said early returns indicated that 
Salafi  groups could take as much as a quarter of the vote, giving the two 
groups of  Islamists combined control of nearly 65 percent of the parliamentary 
seats.  
That victory came at the expense of the liberal parties and youth activists 
 who set off the revolution, affirming their fears that they would be 
unable to  compete with Islamists who emerged from the Mubarak years organized 
and with an  established following. Poorly organized and internally divided, 
the liberal  parties could not compete with Islamists disciplined by decades 
as the sole  opposition to Mr. Mubarak. “We were washed out,” said Shady 
el-Ghazaly Harb, one  of the most politically active of the group.  
Although this week’s voting took place in only a third of Egypt’s 
provinces,  they included some of the nation’s most liberal precincts — like 
Cairo, 
Port  Said and the Red Sea coast — suggesting that the Islamist wave is 
likely to grow  stronger as the voting moves into more conservative rural areas 
in the coming  months. (Alexandria, a conservative stronghold, also has 
voted.)  
The preliminary results extend the rising influence of Islamists across a  
region where they were once outlawed and oppressed by autocrats aligned with 
the  West. Islamists have formed governments in Tunisia and Morocco. They 
are  positioned for a major role in post-Qaddafi Libya as well. But it is the 
victory  in Egypt — the largest and once the most influential Arab state, 
an American  ally considered a linchpin of regional stability — that has the 
potential to  upend the established order across the Middle East.  
Islamist leaders, many jailed for years under Mr. Mubarak, were exultant. “
We  abide by the rules of democracy, and accept the will of the people,” 
Essam  el-Erian, a leader of the Brotherhood’s new party, _wrote in the British 
newspaper The Guardian_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/nov/30/egypt-victor-election-democracy)
 . “There  will be winners and losers. But 
the real — and only — victor is Egypt.”  
Results will not be final until January, after two more rounds of voting. 
And  the ultimate scope of the new Parliament’s power remains unclear because 
Egypt  has remained under military rule since Mr. Mubarak resigned as 
president in  February. But Parliament is expected to play a role in drafting a 
new  Constitution with the ruling military council, although the council has 
given  contradictory indications about how much parliamentary input it will 
allow.  
The emergence of a strong Islamist bloc in Parliament is already quickening 
a  showdown with the military. Brotherhood leaders announced Wednesday that 
they  expected the Islamist parliamentary majority to name a prime minister 
to replace  the civilian government now serving the military. In response, 
a senior official  of the military-led government insisted that the ruling 
generals would retain  that prerogative.  
The unexpected rise of a strong ultraconservative Islamist faction to the  
right of the Brotherhood is likely to shift Egypt’s cultural and political  
center of gravity to the right as well. Leaders of the Brotherhood’s Freedom 
and  Justice Party will likely feel obliged to compete with the 
ultraconservatives  for Islamist voters, and at the same time will not feel the 
same 
need to  compromise with liberals to form a government.  
“It means that, if the Brotherhood chooses, Parliament can be an Islamists  
affair — a debate between liberal Islamists, moderate Islamists and  
conservatives Islamists, and that is it,” Michael Wahid Hanna, an Egyptian-born 
 
researcher at _the Century Foundation_ (http://tcf.org/)  in Cairo, said this 
week.  
The ultraconservative Salafi parties, meanwhile, will be able to use their  
electoral clout to make their own demands for influence on appointments in 
the  new government. Mr. Hanna added: “I don’t mind saying this is not a 
great thing.  It is not a joyous day on my end.”  
If the majority proves durable, the longer-term implications are hard to  
predict. The Brotherhood has pledged to respect basic individual freedoms 
while  using the influence of the state to nudge the culture in a more 
traditional  direction. But the Salafis often talk openly of laws mandating a 
shift 
to  Islamic banking, restricting the sale of alcohol, providing special 
curriculums  for boys and girls in public schools, and censoring the content of 
the arts and  entertainment.  
Their leaders have sometimes proposed that a special council of religious  
scholars advise Parliament or the top courts on legislation’s compliance 
with  Islamic law. Egyptian election laws required the Salafi parties to put at 
least  one woman on their electoral roster for each district, but they put 
the women  last on their lists to ensure they would not be elected, and some 
appear with  pictures of flowers in place of their faces on campaign 
posters.  
Sheik Hazem Shouman, an important Salafi leader, recently rushed into a  
public concert on the campus of Mansoura University to try to persuade the 
crowd  to turn away from the “sinful” performance and go home. He defended his 
actions  on a television talk show, saying he had felt like a doctor making 
an emergency  intervention to save a patient dying of cancer.  
The new majority is likely to increase the difficulty of sustaining the  
United States’ close military and political partnership with post-Mubarak 
Egypt,  though the military has said it plans to maintain a monopoly over many 
aspects  of foreign affairs. Islamist political leaders miss no opportunity 
to criticize  Washington’s policies toward Iraq, Afghanistan, Israel and the 
_Palestinians_ 
(http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/p/palestinians/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier)
 . And while Brotherhood 
leaders have said  they intend to preserve but perhaps renegotiate the 1979 
Camp David peace treaty  with Israel, the Salafi parties have been much less 
reassuring. Some have  suggested putting the treaty to a referendum.  
Speaking on the condition of anonymity, an Israeli official acknowledged  
concerns: “Obviously, it is hard to see in this result good news for Israel.”
  
Some members of Egypt’s Coptic Christian minority — about 10 percent of 
the  population — joked Wednesday that they would prepare to leave the 
country.  Previously protected by Mr. Mubarak’s patronage, many have dreaded 
the  
Islamists’ talk of protecting the Islamic character of Egypt. Some 
Brotherhood  leaders often repeat that they believe citizenship is an equal 
right of 
all  regardless of sect, even chanting at some campaign rallies that Copts 
are also  “sons of Egypt.” But Salafis more often declare that Christians 
should not fear  Islamic law because it requires the protection of religious 
minorities, an  explanation that many Christians feel assigns them 
second-class status.  
Most Copts voted for the liberal Egyptian bloc, which was vying for second  
place with the Salafis in some reports. It was an eclectic alliance against 
the  Islamists, dominated by the Social Democrats, a left-leaning party 
with ties to  the revolution’s leaders, and by the Free Egyptians, the 
business-friendly party  founded and promoted by Naguib Sawiris, the Coptic 
Christian  media-and-telecommunications tycoon.  
The results indicated that some of the candidates and slates put forward by 
 the former ruling party appeared to have won back their seats. It was 
unclear  how large a bloc they might form, but they could prove sympathetic to 
the  familiar mantra of stability-above-all that the ruling military is 
putting  forward.

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