Egypt votes in parliamentary elections
The more than 5,000 candidates overwhelmingly support President Sisi and are widely expected to dominate parliament.
Egyptians are voting for a parliament expected to firmly back President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who has crushed all opposition since ousting his predecessor, Mohamed Morsi, in 2013.
The much-delayed vote for the 596-member parliament – the previous assembly was dissolved in June 2012 – is to be staged in two phases between October 17 and December 2.
Polling stations opened at 9am (07:00 GMT) and will close at 9pm, with more than 27 million people across 14 of Egypt’s 27 provinces eligible to vote on Sunday and Monday in the first phase.
Analysts said most of the more than 5,000 candidates in the polls overwhelmingly support Sisi and are expected to dominate parliament.
“If lawmakers wanted to, they could install a certain balance,” said Youssri al-Azabawi, expert at the Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies.
“But, in view of Sisi’s popularity, it won’t happen. The president will maintain considerable powers.”
Many Egyptians tired of political turmoil since the 2011 ouster of veteran leader Hosni Mubarak support Sisi, who has vowed to revive an ailing economy and restore stability amid a deadly crackdown targeting supporters of Mubarak’s Islamist successor.
“It’s really a parliament that is not expected to be revolutionary or reformist,” political analyst Hazem Hosni said.
The constitution empowers parliament to move a no-confidence motion against the president and also gives politicians 15 days to review all presidential decrees.
But the vote is being held in the absence of any real opposition and has inspired none of the enthusiasm of the first post-Mubarak polls in 2011.
The Muslim Brotherhood movement that dominated the last assembly has been banned, while the leftist and secular movements that led the 2011 uprising are boycotting or are poorly represented in the polls.
‘Make the right choice’
As Egyptians abroad started casting their ballots on Saturday, the president appeared on television calling on citizens to vote.
“Celebrate the choice of representatives and make the right choice,” said the former army chief.
“I am expecting Egyptian youth to be the driving force in this celebration of democracy.”
When he was still army chief, Sisi toppled Morsi – Egypt’s first freely elected leader – in July 2013 after mass protests against his divisive year-long rule.
An ensuing government crackdown targeting Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood movement – which had swept all elections since Mubarak’s fall in 2011 – has left at least 1,400 dead and tens of thousands imprisoned.
Hundreds including Morsi himself have been sentenced to death after mass trials which the United Nations denounced as “unprecedented in recent history”.