Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Congrats to him and the people of Egypt.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/25/world/middleeast/mohamed-morsi-of-muslim-brotherhood-declared-as-egypts-president.html

Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency
By DAVID D. KIRKPATRICK
Published: June 24, 2012 Comment

CAIRO — Election regulators named Mohamed Morsi of the Muslim Brotherhood the winner of Egypt’s first competitive presidential elections, handing the Islamist group a symbolic triumph and a new weapon in its struggle for power with the ruling military council.

After an hourlong speech in which he detailed dozens of specific inquiries down to the ballot-box level, the chairman of the election commission, Farouk Sultan, announced that Mr. Morsi had won 51 percent of the runoff vote completed last weekend. The other candidate, the former general Ahmed Shafik, won 48 percent.

Mr. Morsi’s victory is an ambiguous milestone in Egypt’s promised transition to democracy after the ouster 16 months ago of President Hosni Mubarak. After an election that international monitors called credible, the military-led government has recognized an electoral victory by an opponent of military rule over Mr. Shafik, who promised harmony with the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces.

But Mr. Morsi’s recognition as president does little to resolve the larger standoff between the generals and the Brotherhood over the balance of power over the institutions of government and the future constitution. Under the generals’ plan, Mr. Morsi, 60, will assume an office stripped of almost all authority under a military-issued interim constitution.

Having dissolved the democratically elected and Brotherhood-led Parliament on the eve of the presidential vote, the generals who seized control after Mr. Mubarak’s ouster abrogated their pledge to hand power by June 30, eliciting charges of a new military coup.

There were cheers of celebration by a crowd of hundreds of thousands who had gathered in the capital’s iconic Tahrir Square, where the Brotherhood is leading a six-day occupation to demand a retraction of the military’s power grab.

After 84 years as an often outlawed secret society struggling in the prisons and shadows of monarchs and dictators, the Brotherhood is now closer than ever to its dream of building a novel Islamist democracy. And its leaders vowed to fight on for the restoration of Parliament regardless of Mr. Morsi’s win.

Although it was clear as early as Monday morning that Mr. Morsi had won more votes than Mr. Shafik, the weeklong delay in the official results stirred widespread fears that the military-led government might seek to name Mr. Shafik as a decisive blow in the generals’ power struggle with the Brotherhood.

Before the results were announced, the capital was as tense Sunday as on any day since the two and a half week revolt that brought down Mr. Mubarak. Army tanks and soldiers were deployed around the election commission, the Parliament and other institutions to prepare for possible violence. Foreign embassies warned their citizens to stay away from downtown. Banks, government offices and schools all closed early to allow students and employees to get off the streets.

In Tahrir Square, at least, the confirmation of Mr. Morsi’s win is expected to bring celebrations instead of clashes. His designation as president-elect will hand the Brotherhood and its allies a bully pulpit to use the struggle for power with the military. The Brotherhood has sought to rebuild the partnership with more secular and liberal advocates of democracy that came together in the uprising against Mr. Mubarak, and Brotherhood leaders have vowed not to hold any negotiations with the generals without the participation of the other groups in their so-called “national front.”

But on its own, the Brotherhood’s control of the presidency will do nothing to reduce the calm the fierce polarization of Egyptian society. On Saturday night, a counter protest that reportedly grew to over 10,000 gathered in a neighborhood with a heavy concentration of military personnel to demonstrate in support of the ruling generals, Mr. Shafik and secular government. Mr. Shafik, Mr. Mubarak’s last prime minister, has campaigned with the support of the old ruling party elite as a new strongman who can bring back order after the 16 months of chaos.

Earlier in the day, a group of secular political leaders and lawmakers who call themselves liberals had held a televised news conference to declare their support for the generals and the dissolution of the Brotherhood-led Parliament. The praised the shutdown of parliament as a victory for law and order, citing an unusually rushed court decision announced the day before. (The Brotherhood has respected the ruling but challenged its implementation.)

The secular politicians also accused the Brotherhood of “hijacking” the revolution and called it a threat to the “civil” character of the state. They dismissed the Brotherhood’s pledges to govern in coalition, respecting individual and minority rights, and instead accused the group of plotting to impose religious rule.

Incongruously given Washington’s history of antagonism with the Islamists of the Muslim Brotherhood, the secular block argued that the United States was improperly attempting to sway the presidential race in favor of the Brotherhood, although American officials and the embassy have said they support only the democratic process regardless of the result.

Mr. Morsi is an American-educated engineer who received his doctoral degree at the University of Southern California. He used to lead the Brotherhood’s small bloc of lawmakers in the Mubarak-dominated parliament.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Congratulations indeed. One hopes Morsi who is interestingly the first Quran Hafiz to rule Egypt does his job well and serves his people and not his own interests or those of Foriegn powers.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Thats a great news but ...he and his party should not behave like other corrupt parties...

Lot of Islamic parties are nothing But political parties with agenda to get votes of religious peoples

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

He can’t do anything. The military is de facto in control and not even a peep from the democratic world. The Military removes the Parliament. No word. The military says it will write the constitution. Not a word. But a Muslim wins the elections. OH NOES! The Terrorists are here!!! :rolleyes:

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Congratulations to Morsi and the people of Egypt. I hope this turns out to be good for them in the long run.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

^^
Really hope so.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Good how? There is no parliament. There is no executive either. There is SCAF and a figure head leader. Which is Morsi. This is the most retarded system ever.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

I think CM has more than a fair point.

In Pakistan and other countries we always shout that we dont want army influence on matters and in the West there is a view that Martial rule is worse than anarchy since it leads to that state anyway... therefore I ask why the West supports this Millitary state that is currently the Status Quo in Egpyt and where the democratically elected ruler does not have full control over the people who voted him into power...

So this is the Western notion of Democracy is it? Just remind me how this is so different from Dictatorship...???

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

What do you mean a “Muslim” wins the election? Ahmed Shafiq is a Muslim too.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

I also hope that he does his job well, but frankly, his doing the job well has nothing to do with his being Hafiz e Quran. The two are mutually independent.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

^ That is ture but Islam is a way of life so if he implements the teachings of his faith if not on others then at least to the things he does then it will be good for all, no?

Furthermore before you all get up in my face and go jihad on me for implying an Islamic Egypt or any sort of Islamist empire... relax Islam teaches peace as well.

If he follows Islaimic principles one hopes he would be less corrupt and think for others not just his own gain or to serve the Foreign powers... how he acts might not be related to Islam at all but it will all come back to him and the people in future will never again trust a Islamic type guy... therefore its crucial from a cultural viewpoint that he does not tarnish his character by acting like his predacessor.

Now Religion and the state can be separate, but a man who has no ideals to live by and no codes or belief system is not the sort of man everyone can follow.

Even if your not religous you still have to have faith in a cause.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Being religious or not has no impact on a person's competence. Abu Jahl was an enemy of Islam but was in no way incompetent.

If by saying 'he does his job well' means he rules according to his religious beliefs then it is another story. In such a case I understand your point.
Thanks.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Please re read my post... I stressed how **Faith **perhaps better described as belief does play a role. Even Abu Jahl had faith if not in Islam that at least in a cuase that kept him going.

Trust me from a pyschological point of view if you have a glim hope or faith in something you find a way to overcome hardship much easier than if your entirely hopless and in despair.

Those who really find themselves up to thier necks in a diffuilt situation are ussually the first to cry out to help towards all manner of things... nothing was more ironic in my life experiences than sieng an Athiest squirm and cry out to several different dieties and finally his mother so that he could be spared... suffice to say people managed to get him out of the well.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

And all this has something to do with him being hafiz e quran?!

Got it. Sorry for interruption.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Well for your information it takes a lot of hard work and dedication to become a Hafiz so again yes being a Hafiz is a good thing that does help in political careers and a lot of other aspects of life.

Just becuase you have a problem with people who are hafiz does not mean they dont have a right to be in politics or to lead a country.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

An excellent first move. In an effort to drive national unity and to symbolise that Muslim Brotherhood rule does not mean oppression, Mursi stated that he will appoint a woman and a Coptic Christian to be his vice presidents, though he is currently looking for suitable candidates.

Which means that under a Muslim Brotherhood Presidency, women and Christians will have risen to higher positions than they ever have in the history of the modern Egyptian state.

Mohamed Morsi to pick woman and Christian as Egypt’s vice-presidents | World news | The Guardian

Mohamed Morsi’s first appointments as president-elect of Egypt will be a woman and a Coptic Christian, his spokesman has told the Guardian, as he moves to allay fears of the Muslim Brotherhood.

Sameh el-Essawy said that although the names of the two choices had not been finalised, they would be Morsi’s two vice-presidents.

When the appointments go through, they will constitute the first time in Egypt’s history that either a woman or a Coptic Christian has occupied such an elevated position in the executive branch.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Hopefully, this doesn't turn out to be the only progressive or 21st century thing he does in his presidency.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

So far Tunisia and Turkey run by Islamists have proven to be far better at Governance than the Western back dictators.

Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

Mursi has ordered that

  1. His portrait should not be displayed at government buildings

  2. Guards should not try to disperse relatives of slain protesters away from the presidential palace

  3. He has promised that he will not have police stop all other traffic when his motorcade is passing through.

  4. And lastly…

If only Pakistan could have a president like this one.

Egypt court rejects army powers to arrest civilians | Reuters


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Re: Morsi Declared Winner of Egyptian Presidency

More awesomeness by Mursi in his inaugoration speech. In the twitterverse, even secular Egyptians are saying that he’s at least saying all the right things.

I’m starting to get the feeling and hope that inshallah he will be the Umar Bin Abdul Aziz of our age! (Though of course with a happier ending, inshallah).

Egypt’s Morsi defies military in fiery speech - Middle East - Al Jazeera English

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