Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff
stefano » Tue May 20, 2014 7:33 pm wrote:Sure. Sorry I had a spasm of paranoia about posting proprietary stuff on the Internet in searchable form but don't suppose many of my clients will be hanging around RI. Here is the whole thing.
Morsy and his gang of thugs are finished. Only he and his American and Israeli admirers refuse to face this reality
SISI'S CAMPAIGN AND WHAT TO EXPECT NEXT
Campaigning ahead of Egypt’s presidential election on May 26 and 27 is in the final stretch. The election will be a one-round affair since there are only two candidates: Field Marshal Abdel-Fattah Al-Sisi, the former defence minister and leader of the coup d’état against then-president Mohammed Moursi in July 2013, and Hamdeen Sabbahi, a Nasserite social democrat with long experience in politics. Mr Sisi’s popularity is enormous thanks to the coup and the subsequent efforts of the army under his command to pacify Egypt and bring to heel the Muslim Brotherhood (MB), but there is opposition to him from MB members and other Islamists who still consider Mr Moursi the legitimate president of Egypt, as well as from liberals who see the military man as a potential dictator in the mould of Hosni Mubarak, the former Air Force commander who ruled Egypt from 1981 to 2011.
Many of these liberals are backing Mr Sabbahi (others are boycotting or supporting Mr Sisi), but Islamists are either calling for a boycott or, in the case of the Salafi movements, supporting Mr Sisi. Together with the massive support Mr Sisi has among middle-class Egyptians who are grateful for the return to stability, among poorer Egyptians who have become safer and who have been energised by the post-coup surge in nationalist feeling, among Christians and women whom he has protected from the MB’s hostile and divisive Islamist project, and among civil servants and soldiers, the boycott seals the election. We do not expect Mr Sisi to get less than 70% of the vote and a score of over 75% is a possibility.
Mr Sisi has run a low-key campaign, partly for reasons of safety: he is an obvious target for assassination at the hands of radicalised MB members or the more extremist jihadists to whom he is a mortal enemy. On May 17 a bomb went off at a Sisi campaign rally (the candidate was not present) and injured four people.
Instead of running a traditional presidential campaign, Mr Sisi has preferred to hold small meetings with regional figures of influence and gave a long, two-part interview on television in May in which he laid out his vision for Egypt under his presidency.
As could be expected from a military man, his main emphasis is on security and on re-establishing the stability of the country.
While he said that “protesting and expressing one’s opinion […] cannot be rejected,” he sounded distinctly unenthusiastic about the “state of revolution” in which Egypt has been since Mr Mubarak was forced to resign in February 2011, and said that Egyptians need to “organise our whole lives, this includes our way of expressing our opinions.” This statement was made in defence of a controversial protest law which has been used to detain prominent young revolutionary leaders who played important roles in the 2011 uprising and even in the protests that preceded the end of Mr Moursi’s government.
He was impatient when the interviewer from Sky News Arabia asked a question about recent court judgements that open the door for mass death sentences, saying that the question “doubts the independence and fairness of our judiciary” and “we are not eligible to comment on its verdicts.” Egypt’s courts have consistently been hostile to the MB and this attitude will tend to make them co-operative with the executive after Mr Sisi is elected. His statements about the MB leave no doubt that the current measures against the movement will be kept in place or intensified after the election: he reiterated an earlier statement that “in case I win the elections the MB will no longer exist.”
On the economy, Mr Sisi has made few clear policy statements, instead seeing the same unity and co-operation that are required to re-establish security and stability as the solution to the country’s economic woes: “the unification of Egyptians to understand the problem, then the unification to overcome it.” He talked about reorganising subsidies (“rich people are the ones who benefit the most”), addressing the energy crisis, and paying off Egypt’s substantial external debt. If Egypt pulls together in the way it needs to, then, Mr Sisi said, “Egyptians and Sisi promise themselves that within two years their problems will come to an end.”
Mr Sabbahi has been campaigning on one of the slogans of the revolution: ‘bread, freedom and social justice’. Since Mr Sisi, too, promises bread and social justice, and both candidates say that they intend to follow the vision of Gamal Abdel Nasser (Egypt’s near-mythical leader from 1956 to 1970), Mr Sabbahi’s electoral strategy has been mostly about freedom – more specifically about the freedoms that Egyptians fought for in the streets over the past three chaotic years. Mr Sabbahi says that, if elected, he will repeal the protest law and free ‘unjustly imprisoned’ youth revolutionaries, although like the front-runner he says that he will make sure the MB does not regain its former power. A number of members of the Tamarod campaign which preceded the 2013 coup are backing Mr Sabbahi for this reason, as are some smaller leftist parties. He will get support from some other middle-class liberals too, but MB sympathisers will not vote for him and the mass of Egypt’s population is firmly pro-Sisi.
While Mr Sisi has not made any clear statements on economic policy, what he has said so far, and the actions of the interim government in which he was defence minister are a fairly good guide to what we can expect from his presidency (Mr Sisi was certainly one of the most influential cabinet members in the interim government, if not the real decider in the place of the two prime ministers that government has had).
The main focus will be on security and on rebuilding the operational capacity of the police to address crime and extremism. The president’s hostility to street protests will continue to extend to organised labour, and we expect strikes to be repressed fairly harshly. There have already been signs of this, with strikers being accused of playing the MB’s game or of lacking sufficient patriotism. Subsidies will be cut, and street actions in protest at these measures will be cracked down on, too. There will be more formal repression against media and civil society, in addition to the self-censorship that has been apparent in the media as journalists and television personalities make sure to be seen as pro-Sisi. Other austerity measures in government will follow, but defining and implementing those measures will be the task of the next prime minister, to be elected along with a Parliament at a date to be announced.
The next few years will certainly be difficult in Egypt. The austerity measures and efforts to reduce government debt of which Mr Sisi has spoken have been urgent for years, and unfortunately such measures can only be implemented by a government which is willing to back its arguments with State force. Mr Sisi’s government will be of that kind. While the medium-term impact on civil rights and organised labour will be negative, the long-term benefits will accrue to the population as a whole and will strengthen Egypt, on one condition: that the reforms take place in a fair and transparent way.
We have concerns about grand corruption in the coming government – Mr Sisi has been making the right noises about corruption but his backers include some of the most powerful business interests in Mr Mubarak’s government, and of course the army, which is a huge economic player in Egypt. If these interests manage to safeguard the privileges they acquired especially in the Mubarak years, if workers continue to work for low wages while their officer bosses asset-strip companies and pay themselves enormous salaries, and prices increase while connected businessmen snap up lucrative tenders, then political risk will trend negative. If, by contrast, Mr Sisi delivers what he is promising, and he really is the man Egyptians think they are voting for next week, then risk will trend slowly positive.
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:No offense, but I don’t understand. Your analysis doesn't contain anything that isn't all over American Dream’s cut and paste junk that he gets from disinfo faux-Left and other thinly-disguised US intelligence propaganda sites. Is that what your clients want?
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:What happened on July 3, 2013 was not a coup d’état. A coup d’état is when a group of military officers (usually a small group from within the army, and not necessarily from among its top brass) depose the legitimate government and replace it. This group of officers become the country's new rulers; they almost invariably impose martial law and 'emergency measures' that supersede normal laws and state institutions.
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:In a way, Sisi is not running a presidential campaign at all. [...] In fact, it's accurate to say that he's not running for president, he's working very hard to inform himself and preparing himself to shoulder the heavy burdens of the presidency.
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:First, it's silly to say that "Egypt’s courts have consistently been hostile to the MB," given the fact that the MB is a criminal, terrorist organization under Egyptian law, which, duh, makes it rather unlikely that Egypt's courts would be friendly to the MB.
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:Your misquote,“Egyptians and Sisi promise themselves that within two years their problems will come to an end,” is not only ludicrous, but totally out of character. He never promises anything, other than that he will serve the Egyptian people and nation faithfully, and work tirelessly and sacrifice without limit on their behalf. Everything else is conditional and depends on the people's will.
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:Again, it is false that "both candidates say that they intend to follow the vision of Gamal Abdel Nasser.” While Sabbahy has based his entire career on identify himself as a "Nasserist", Sisi has never, ever come even close to doing so. When asked about his views of Nasser, he has replied in diplomatic terms, that there have been many great leaders in Egypt's past, but that history does not repeat itself and today's circumstances, obstacles and challenges are very different today than those faced by Nasser, Sadat or any other historical leaders. In fact, it is the Egyptian people who have insisted on identifying Sisi with Nasser, a phenomenon which began on the streets, with people carrying the photos of both side-by-side.
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:You are allowing your own prejudices to blind you. There will be no "crack-down", not only because that is the very opposite of Sisi's style. He does not "repress", harshly or otherwise. His record speaks for itself.
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:In any case, the new constitution radically reduces presidential powers and commensurately increases the authority and powers of the prime minister, who will be appointed by the president, but only conditionally, pending the parliament's approval. The president will not be able to hold the prime minister or indeed any cabinet minister accountable, let alone fire them. In contrast, the parliament has the authority to legally depose the president, and must ratify most of his decisions. The parliament will issue the laws that the police and that the independent judiciary are obliged to enforce, and the Ministry of Interior (which includes the police) is accountable to the parliament. But the parliament will be only accountable to the people. In other words, under the new constitution real power will be in the hands of the people, through the parliament. Sisi as president will not have the tools that previous presidents have had, to oppress or enforce his will against that of the people.
AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:While it's true that some wealthy individuals have bought billboard space and banners promoting Sisi's candidacy, and organized campaign rallies, etc.(which he does not attend or even acknowledge), the fact is that they add nothing to Sisi's popularity, which is already sky-high and needs no publicity; on the contrary, it is they who are trying to associate themselves in the public's mind with Sisi, almost certainly in preparation for the upcoming parliamentary elections. As for Sisi himself, when asked about these supposed "backers", he smiles and says that "nobody will get anything from me," meaning that he has no strings to be pulled.
CAIRO, May 29 (Reuters) - Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the general who toppled Egypt's first freely elected leader, swept to victory in a presidential election, provisional results showed on Thursday, joining a long line of leaders drawn from the military.
But a lower than expected turnout figure raised questions about Sisi's credibility after his supporters had idolised him as a hero who can deliver political and economic stability.
Sisi captured 93.3 percent of votes cast as counting nearly came to a close, judicial sources said. His only rival, leftist politician Hamdeen Sabahi, gained 3.0 percent while 3.7 percent of votes were declared void.
Stefano wrote:To hear you tell it there is no source, in English at least, that isn't in some way tainted, so my options for informing myself are pretty limited.
Stefano wrote:Moursi's illegitimacy, the size of the revolution against him, and what happened next do not come into it.
Stefano wrote:What I had in mind was the many instances in 2012-13 of the courts blocking moves by the MB government at the time, ruling electoral laws unconstitutional and so on.
Stefano wrote:The quote was from the Cairo Post's transcript of the interview, and I did include the conditional nature of the commitment, such as it is.
Zeina: So today, Sisi is saying, "I do not come to clash with any social class; the rich have the right to be rich, as long as they respect the law. But I have come to rescue the weak, the poor."
Sisi: Correct. And to improve their lives. The poor have been patient for years. For years. And how much longer will they be patient? Will we not take action to improve their food, their housing? There's so much I want to say about that.
Zeina: You've asked the question, how long will the poor remain patient? They've borne so much. And if you'll permit me, much of their patience can be attributed to despair. They have repeatedly been given promises that are not realistic, and not feasible. This has made them lose faith in their governments, their authorities, their rulers, during many eras.
Sisi: True. If the Egyptian people find genuine credibility, and genuine actions, and genuine loyalty, followed by concrete results on the ground, they are capable of more patience than any of you can imagine. The question is not, "When?" although that is a legitimate question. The issue is, that as you have mentioned, they won't believe any more promises. They can't. They must see something real that convinces them, something actual and on the ground. If they see this, they will know that what is said, is done. In that case, they will be patient, and they will endure.
Zeina: When will they see?
Sisi: We figure that if things go according to the plan that we've set, we will witness improvements within two years. However, to overcome all the problems that we currently face, problems like the proliferation of shanty-towns, and homeless street children, these are problems that require long-term solutions, large-scale programs that will take many years to produce effective results. But for us to be able to see a condition of adequacy, a relief of the urgent needs that we mentioned earlier, I can't say prosperity, but to see a recovery, we're talking about two years.
Zeina: Two years?
Sisi: God willing.
Zeina: (smiling) Sisi is promising the Egyptians that within two years, they will feel that their pockets are full?
Sisi: (smiles) Sisi and the Egyptians promise each other that within two years, they will resolve their problem.
Zeina: I will return to my original question: why does Sisi believe that he can succeed where others have failed?
Sisi: It's a great question. Perhaps it's because I can see the problem as it really is. And that's important. I want to remind a lot of the politicians, intelligentsia and experts that I've met, including some who were in government before June 30, that they were told of the scale of the problem, and that it will be an enormous challenge for anyone to tackle. They were told what Egypt's situation is. However... (he shrugs). The only way to tackle this problem is to stand together in one line like this, and see the problem straight on, the way it really is. Without minimizing it, or exaggerating it. And we must also see the solution from the same perspective, all of us standing together side-by-side. And then we must move to implement that solution. That's how the problem can be solved. Because in fact it is a huge problem. An enormous problem.
Stefano wrote:AlicetheKurious » Fri May 23, 2014 2:51 pm wrote:You are allowing your own prejudices to blind you. There will be no "crack-down", not only because that is the very opposite of Sisi's style. He does not "repress", harshly or otherwise. His record speaks for itself.
I still disagree on this - and many would say that his record does speak for itself and shows a propensity to break heads. If turnout ends up being low, or even if lots of people just suspect that the government inflated turnout because of these initial reports that it was low and the extra day of voting and so on, then it'll be difficult for him to make policy. Given the urgency of implementing reforms I expect he'll then push things through and the security services will be tempted to act harshly. We'll see.
Stefano wrote:When will you have a new parliament though? Not before September, right? I don't think the time between now and then will just be about organising elections, and in the meantime Mohammed Ibrahim is still at the interior ministry. I think he's a bit hardcore. Also, what happens if anyone contests government actions on constitutional grounds? The courts will decide, and will, in the current climate, tend to rule in favour of the executive especially if there is even a hint of a MB or April 6 link on the part of any petitioner.
Stefano wrote:He would hardly say that he owes big favours to big men, even if he does.
Remember Alice's kitchen?AlicetheKurious » Thu May 29, 2014 5:23 am wrote:On a lighter note, I can't believe I'm not sick of this song yet!! Everybody's dancing to it, in the streets, in their cars, at parties, weddings, and yesterday...in my kitchen!
http://english.alarabiya.net/en/webtv/r ... -song.html
Allegro wrote:Hi, Alice.
As of this post, the U.S. youtube version of the TV-host-dances-to-popular-Egypt-election-song has a totally different sound track that hadn't been synchronized to the host's movements, and there's no vocalist in the track, either. So the vid isn't nearly as fun to watch as the one you linked to.
Here you go! This is the vid I ^ reviewed. Evidently, it was uploaded here in the U.S. May 28, 2014.AlicetheKurious » Fri May 30, 2014 1:49 am wrote:Wow. I wish you'd linked to the US version. I shouldn't be surprised, but I am. ...Allegro wrote:Hi, Alice.
As of this post, the U.S. youtube version of the TV-host-dances-to-popular-Egypt-election-song has a totally different sound track that hadn't been synchronized to the host's movements, and there's no vocalist in the track, either. So the vid isn't nearly as fun to watch as the one you linked to.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 153 guests