http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2010/997/op11.htm

 6 - 12 May 2010
Issue No. 997
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875

Islamist shortcomings
While Islamist movements have learnt to communicate better, the practical 
fruits of engaging in the political processes of Arab countries have been few, 
writes Amr Hamzawy* 

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Several days ago, Nathan Brown, a political science professor at George 
Washington University, and I completed the manuscript for a book that will be 
published soon by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Based on 
field studies conducted in Morocco, Egypt, Jordan, Palestine, Yemen and Kuwait, 
it explores the limits and repercussions of the participation of Islamist 
parties and movements in the political process in the Arab world, with a 
particular focus on their electoral and parliamentary activities and efficacy. 
In general, the study draws the following conclusions:

Apart from Hamas, no Islamist movement or party has succeeded in obtaining a 
parliamentary majority. In fact, after the 2006 Palestinian legislative 
elections, even Hamas gave out signs that it had been caught by surprise by its 
victory and had given little thought to the possible repercussions of this 
result. It thus appears that although Islamists had regularly participated in 
elections, they either deliberately avoided fielding themselves broadly or 
strongly enough to reach power, or they hoped, at best, to be able to 
participate in a coalition government. Their modest aims have less to do with 
their ambitions and agendas than with their deep appreciation of two 
interrelated realities in the prevailing political environment in most Arab 
countries. The first is that Arab parliaments are in substance and practice 
non-democratic and ineffective. Most are heavily dominated by the regime's 
ruling party or, at best, consist of a collection of diffuse political parties 
and individuals, many of whom are government appointees. In addition, the 
nominal powers of parliaments to legislate and monitor government are rarely 
put into practice. The second reality is that while Arab regimes have preferred 
to politically outmanoeuvre their Islamist adversaries, as against suppressing 
them entirely, they still regard the Islamists as their most dangerous 
opponents and the most capable of threatening the stability of ruling regimes. 
Government security apparatuses tend to be milder towards Islamists the more 
that Islamist movements and parties avoid displaying their organisational and 
popular strength. 

Yet, as well as they have read the political environment and adjusted their 
electoral ambitions accordingly, Islamists have made no steady improvement in 
the political performance of their parties. In elections and parliamentary life 
they have achieved much less than their leaders and supporters had hoped for. 
For example, following the 2005 legislative elections, the Egyptian Muslim 
Brotherhood formed the largest, most cohesive and best organised opposition 
bloc in the country's parliamentary history. Yet they scored only a paltry 
handful of legislative victories in the past five years. In Morocco, the 
Justice and Development Party has remained excluded from government while the 
Jordanian Islamic Action Front has been watching its parliamentary strength 
gradually decline and its internal coherence disintegrate. Hamas has been 
unable to avail itself of its parliamentary majority for more than a year and a 
half. In Kuwait, the Islamic Constitutional Movement has suffered a spate of 
electoral losses while the opposition Yemeni Reform Rally has discovered that 
opposition under authoritarian rule offers barely a shadow of a say when 
compared with siding with and supporting the government.

Is this to say that participating in Arab parliaments is a wasted effort? How 
do Islamist parties and movements evaluate their own experience? Why do they 
continue to involve themselves in electoral politics and parliamentary 
activity? It is worth noting the explanations, justifications and motives that 
Arab Islamists cite in answer to such questions.

Essentially they argue that taking part in electoral campaigns offers them an 
opportunity to communicate with a broader public and spread their religious and 
socio-political reformist messages, as well as to expand their potential 
electoral base. Those of them who do succeed in winning parliamentary seats, or 
municipal or local government posts, enjoy the immunity accorded to these 
positions as they engage in intensive public action at home or communicate with 
government and non-governmental institutions abroad (Egyptian Muslim 
Brotherhood and Moroccan Justice and Development Party MPs have excelled in 
this during the past few years). In addition, membership in parliament and, to 
a lesser extent, provincial and municipal boards come with greater media 
coverage, greater freedom to travel, and opportunities to propose bills and to 
question officials in a manner consistent with Islamist social and political 
programmes. 

Islamists further stress that participating in elections and parliaments helps 
them demonstrate to public opinion at home and abroad that their movement 
continues to enjoy considerable popularity and a solid constituency. Whereas 
other opposition movements can issue statements strongly condemning government 
policies and practices, few are able to show that their positions carry any 
weight outside their conference forums and cultural circles. The Islamist 
movements with a significant parliamentary representation are among these few. 
In general, setting aside the tactics and instruments that ruling regimes use 
to ensure their electoral victories, elections reward those forces that are 
capable of systematic and sustained grassroots action, which makes electoral 
campaigns a favourite arena for the propagation of Islamist ideas and for 
political mobilisation. 

Islamists often speak of participating in elections and parliaments as though 
it were more of a moral and social duty than an opportunity. The classical 
Islamist argument is founded on the premise that current regimes are unable and 
unwilling to work for the greater public welfare, and to overcome their 
countries' chronic social and economic crises. Therefore, these societies will 
inevitably turn to the "Islamist alternative" in the anticipation that its 
"purer" and unsullied parties will lead them to better solutions. From this 
premise proceeds the conviction that Islamists engage in the political process 
altruistically, out of deference to the popular will. And from this follows the 
claim that were the Islamists to withdraw from public life, this would 
precipitate widespread despair and encourage submission to existing 
authoritarian regimes.

Finally, they maintain that participating in elections and parliamentary life 
offers them a chance to develop and hone new political skills. Over the past 
decades, Islamists have learned how to organise themselves, acculturate their 
supporters, support the poor through healthcare and other social services, and 
to promote Islamic causes worldwide. However, elections require different 
skills: how to organise campaigns, draw up electoral platforms, promote 
candidates and platforms, mobilise popular support, monitor the electoral 
process and validate ballot counting mechanisms. Parliamentary work requires, 
among other things, in-depth expertise in public affairs issues, the ability to 
draft legislation, and familiarity with the available tools for monitoring 
government performance. Also, engaging in the electoral and parliamentary 
processes encourages Islamists to explore the possibilities of working and 
coordinating with other political forces, forming alliances, and consensus 
making. Such skills and expertise can help Islamist movements and parties 
develop new means and strategies for promoting their religious and reformist 
agendas.

If, indeed, Islamists are seeking to augment their contact with the greater 
public, lure potential voters, demonstrate their social influence and acquire 
new skills by means of participating in electoral and parliamentary processes, 
what have they accomplished in these domains during the past few decades? 

Without a doubt they have expanded their audiences. Islamists are definitely 
more capable and more adept at communicating, not only with their own 
supporters but also with secularists, sceptics, the politically apathetic, and 
even foreign diplomats and researchers. Islamist political parties and 
movements have also demonstrated their popularity, albeit at an enormous cost. 
The 2005 elections in Egypt were followed by a wave of repression against the 
Muslim Brotherhood that has not yet abated. The Moroccan Justice and 
Development Party remains locked out of any possibility to participate in a 
ruling coalition while the Jordanian Islamic Action Front is facing Amman's 
increasing tendency to view it as a security threat. Meanwhile, from within 
Hamas there have been grievances that the movement has paid too high a price 
for its 2006 legislative victory. On the other hand, Islamists have succeeded 
in acquiring new political skills and steadily improving their electoral and 
parliamentary performance. However, only rarely have they reaped the benefits 
from these inroads in view of electoral tampering on the part of regimes. In 
addition, their parliamentary victories are meagre in comparison to the numbers 
of laws and policies authorised or adopted during their terms of office. 
Finally, the Islamists have clearly failed to respond to the popular will, as 
they themselves interpret it, for social and political reform. Indeed, in some 
countries these causes have actually suffered steady setbacks in tandem with 
Islamists' participation in electoral and parliamentary politics and in 
conjunction with escalating tensions between them and ruling regimes.

* The writer is research director and senior associate at the Carnegie 
Endowment for International Peace. 


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