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Jewish World Review Dec. 2, 2011 / 6 Kislev, 5772 Egypt's parliament isn't Muslim Brotherhood's first win this year By Hannah Allam
Group has already been quietly staking claim to several areas of a society in transition Winning a dominant voice in the next parliament would be only the latest electoral victory that the Brotherhood has celebrated since Mubarak's ouster last February. Thanks to the lifting of the old regime's laws restricting labor activity, Brotherhood-affiliated candidates in recent months have swept the internal polls for the union-like syndicates that represent millions of Egyptians. In a series of victories stretching back to June, Brotherhood candidates have taken control of syndicates for pharmacists, lawyers, teachers and engineers. They've even taken a majority of seats on the board of one of Cairo's best-known sports and recreation clubs. Those smaller races hold timely lessons for what to expect when the group's leadership takes the national stage, analysts say. Each victory provides insight into the Brotherhood's strengths - and weaknesses - as it prepares to confront expectant constituents, bitter liberals and nervous Western powers. "Power is a double-edged sword," warned Shadi Hamid, a Brotherhood expert at the Brookings Doha Center in Qatar who had just spent several days observing the group on the campaign trail in Egypt. "With the Brotherhood now in a dominant position in Egyptian society, they'll be expected to implement changes," Hamid said. "Now they'll have to deliver, and they haven't had to deliver for the past 80 years," a reference to the Brotherhood's founding in 1928.
Already, liberal and leftist leaders are mustering an opposition bloc to counter the Brotherhood's newfound sway and to, in the words of Refaat el Said, the head of the leftist Tagammu Party, "defend the civil state and principles of equality and justice." "They're saying they're willing to cooperate with leftists and liberals, but it's a different case once they're in parliament," Said said. "They'll start an Islamist bloc that only serves their interests." National-level public office always has been the Brotherhood's ultimate dream, analysts say, and the group laid the groundwork years ago when it began targeting the internal elections of Egypt's many syndicates, union-like groups that protect workers' interests, though they aren't nearly as influential here as their counterparts in the United States. The Brotherhood's success in those syndicate elections "gave us a lot of practical experience in handling issues of public concern," recalled Amr Darrag, an engineer who heads the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party for Giza province. When the Mubarak government realized in the late 1980s and early 1990s that the Brotherhood was moving to control the syndicates, it severely restricted the syndicates' ability to hold elections. The Engineers' Syndicate was one example. When the Brotherhood was poised to lead the huge guild, the government shut down the body and appointed a judge to be the guardian of its affairs. That arrangement continued for 17 years, crippling the organization and cowing its members. Then, earlier this year, Egypt's highest court overturned the former regime's laws, paving the way to free elections for trade syndicates and giving the country's political class a dress rehearsal for the parliamentary polls. Brotherhood-affiliated candidates easily won the Engineers' Syndicate election just days before the parliamentary polls opened. Local news media covered the union vote closely, quoting syndicate members as concerned over how much say the Brotherhood's executive board would have over the syndicate's 475,000 engineers. "If the Brotherhood wins, who will take the decisions? The Supreme Guidance bureau or the syndicate?" Hesham Sedawy, a member engineer, told an Egyptian newspaper. Before the engineers' victory, Brotherhood-affiliated lawyers won more than half the seats on the board of the influential Lawyers' Syndicate. While the non-Brotherhood incumbent chairman narrowly retained his seat, Brotherhood followers swept the general polls, leaving just two seats on the board for nonmembers. In September, Muslim Brotherhood candidates handily beat their opponents for control of the Teachers' Syndicate, Egypt's largest guild, with an estimated 1.2 million members. In June, Brotherhood-linked candidates took over the Pharmacists' Syndicate by a landslide. "We're working hard to pass this test and prove that the people who voted for us chose parliamentarians that understand and appreciate their confidence and trust," said Mohammed el Beltagi, one of the most visible Brotherhood leaders. "People voted for us, and that's the first sign that they expect guarantees from us. It's now the time to prove that they weren't wrong." Sign up for the daily JWR update. It's free. Just click here.
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© 2011, the McClatchy Washington Bureau Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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