Real Clear Politics
 
July 4, 2013  
Morsi's Fall a Blow to Islamists
By _Hamza  Hendawi & Lee Keath_ 
(http://www.realclearworld.com/authors/hamza_hendawi__lee_keath/) 


CAIRO (AP) -- _Egypt_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/egypt/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 
was the centerpiece of the Islamist movement's vault to power in the Arab  
world's sweeping wave of uprisings. Winning election after election here, 
the  Islamists vowed to prove they could govern effectively and implement 
their  vision of political Islam, all while embracing the rules of democracy. 
Mohammed Morsi was their pillar: the veteran of the Muslim Brotherhood, the 
 region's oldest and most prestigious political Islamist group, who became  
Egypt's first freely elected president. 
That is what makes his ouster after barely a year in office, with a 
gigantic  cross-section of Egypt's population demanding he go, such a 
devastating 
blow to  Islamists on multiple levels, not only in Egypt but across a 
tumultuous  region. 
Morsi, his Brotherhood and their harder-line allies say they played by the  
rules of democracy, only to be forced out by opponents who could not play 
it as  well as them at the ballot box and so turned to the military for help. 
The  lesson that the Islamists' extreme fringe may draw: Democracy, which 
many of  them viewed as "kufr" or heresy to begin with, is rigged and 
violence is the  only way to bring their dream of an Islamic state. 
 
But to the millions of Egyptians who marched in the street against Morsi, 
the  Islamists failed at democracy: They overreached. 
The protesters became convinced the Islamists were using wins at the polls 
to  centralize power in the hands of the Muslim Brotherhood far beyond their 
mandate  and treat the country as if it accepted the "Islamist project." 
Even worse, for  many of the protesters, the Islamists simply were not fixing 
Egypt's multiple  and worsening woes. 
That is a serious setback for their dreams, calling into doubt the argument 
 by Islamists across the region that political Islam is the remedy to their 
 society's ills. The damage to their prestige echoes widely, from Gaza 
where the  Hamas rulers who saw in Morsi a strong ally, to Tunisia where a 
Brotherhood  branch holds power, to _Libya_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/libya/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
 
and _Syria_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/syria/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rcwautolink)
   where Islamists push 
for power. 
"The Brotherhood in Egypt is now a cautionary tale," said Michael W. Hanna 
of  the Century Foundation in New York. "Morsi's abysmal performance during 
their  short tenure is a tale of how not to guide and rule." 
The irony is, the Brotherhood knew the risks going in. After the 2011 fall 
of  autocrat Hosni Mubarak, the group vowed not to try to dominate 
parliament and  not to run a candidate for president, knowing the backlash if 
it 
seemed to be  grabbing power or if it led a government that failed to fix a 
broken Egypt. It  went back on each of those promises, every time saying its 
hand was forced into  doing so. 
Morsi himself recognized the power of the street as he vowed to be a  
president for all the people. The day before his formal inauguration on June 
30,  
2012, he first delivered a symbolic oath of office in Cairo's Tahrir 
Square, the  epicenter of the revolt that overthrew his autocratic predecessor. 
"You are the source of power and legitimacy," he told the crowd. Nothing  
stands above "the will of the people. The nation is the source of all power. 
It  grants and withdraws power." 
 
In the broad range of the political Islam movement - from moderates to  
militants - the Brotherhood eventually emerged as the central force arguing 
that  Islamists can be democrats. Their influence drew in harder-line groups to 
 participate at the ballot box. Ultraconservatives who once refused 
elections  that could potentially bring any law but God's law took their chance 
at 
the  polls. 
In an impassioned Facebook post just before the army pushed Morsi out  
Wednesday, one of his top advisers Essam el-Haddad argued that what was  
happening was irrevocably damaging democracy itself, saying the Brotherhood had 
 
been unfairly treated. He insisted history would show the Brotherhood tried to 
 include others in its administration but was shunned. 
"Increasingly, the so-called liberals of _Egypt_ 
(http://realclearworld.com/topic/around_the_world/egypt/?utm_source=rcw&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=rc
wautolink) 
escalated a rhetoric inviting the military to become the custodians of  
government in Egypt," he wrote. "The opposition has steadfastly declined every  
option that entails a return to the ballot box." 
But amid multiple complaints, opponents point to a key factor that turned  
many against the Brotherhood: the post-Mubarak constitution. Morsi had vowed 
a  consensus on the landmark document, but Islamists dominated the panel 
writing  it. Liberals, leftists, secular politicians and Christians steadily 
dropped out,  complaining Morsi's allies were forcing their vision. In the 
end, Morsi  unilaterally decreed himself and the assembly untouchable by the 
courts to  ensure judges did not dissolve the panel, while Islamists hastily 
finished  writing the charter in an all-night marathon session. 
 
It was rushed to a referendum, where it passed with a hearty 63 percent of  
the vote - but only just over 32 percent of the electorate casting ballots. 
Meanwhile, Brotherhood members and other Islamists steadily were given more 
 posts across the government, fueling a perception that they were taking 
over  institutions - though they constantly faced resistance on many fronts 
from the  entrenched bureaucracy. Islamist rhetoric from officials and clerics 
on TV rang  in the ears of many as divisive and harsh. 
Morsi's ouster could now send the Brotherhood into disarray for years to  
come, just as a major crackdown on the group did in 1954. Morsi and many of 
his  advisers have been put under house arrest, and he could face trial for 
escaping  prison during the 2011 uprising. Two top leaders of the group, 
including the  head of its political party Saad el-Katatni, were arrested and 
at 
least 30 more  were expected to meet the same fate. 
The danger now could be that a heavy crackdown will turn into forcibly  
excluding them from politics once more. The Brotherhood was banned for much of  
its 83-year existence. But it still maintains a powerful, organized and  
disciplined network of members nationwide. 
"The forceful removal of the nation's first democratically-elected civilian 
 president risks sending a message to Islamists that they have no place in 
the  political order; sowing fears among them that they will suffer yet 
another  bloody crackdown; and thus potentially prompting violent, even 
desperate  resistance by Morsi's followers," the Brussels based International 
Crisis 
group  warned in a statement.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to