Egyptian parliamentary election, 2015

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Egyptian parliamentary election, 2015

← 2011/2012 17 October – 2 December 2015 2020 →

468 of 596 seats to the House of Representatives (28 seats appointed).
299 seats needed for a majority
 
Leader Sameh Seif El-Yazal Ahmed Shafik
Party Free Egyptians Party Egyptian Patriotic Movement
Alliance For the Love of Egypt Egypt

 
Leader Tarek Zeidan Younes Makhioun
Party Protectors of the Homeland Party al-Nour
Alliance Call of Egypt

Egyptian parliamentary election 2015.svg
  Free Egyptians Party: 65 seats
  Nation's Future Party: 53 seats
  New Wafd Party: 36 seats
  Conference Party: 12 seats
  al-Nour Party: 11 seats
  Conservative Party: 6 seats
  Modern Egypt Party: 4 seats
  Freedom Party: 3 seats
  Independents: 351 seats

Incumbent Speaker of the House

Vacant



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Egyptian parliamentary elections to the House of Representatives were held in two phases, from 17 October to 2 December 2015.[1] The elected parliament will be entrusted with the task of reviewing the laws that were passed while a parliament was not in session.[2]

In preparation for the election, security was tightened across the country with at least 185,000 troops supporting police, president Sisi made a televised appeal for Egyptians to vote, and in mid-October, public sector employees were given half a day's holiday to encourage them to take part. The strikingly low turnout of around 10 %, with "many angry at the government and its policies", was widely regarded as a set-back for the regime and a success for calls to boycotts from oppositional movements.[3]

Background

The parliament is made up of 596 seats, with 448 seats elected through the individual candidacy system, 120 elected through winner-take-all party lists (with quotas for youth, women, Christians, and workers) and 28 selected by the president.[4] The government commission that set the rules for the 2015 parliamentary elections drastically reduced the number of "list seats" (candidates who shared party affiliations or other alliances, and whose ranks had to include people under the age of thirty-five, women, Christians, and other traditionally underrepresented groups) from the 2011 election."[5]

Almost 16,000 officials kept an eye on polling places during the election.[6]

Procedure

First phase: Upper Egypt & West Delta

In the first phase, elections will be held from 17 to 28 October 2015 in the fourteen governorates of the Upper Egypt and West Delta regions, namely the governorates of Giza, Fayoum, Beni Suef, Minya, Asyut, New Valley, Sohag, Qena, Luxor, Aswan, Red Sea, Alexandria, Beheira, and Matruh.

For these governorates, the first round of elections takes place on 18 to 19 October for Egyptian residents, while it took place on 17 to 18 October for Egyptian expatriates. Runoffs will be held on 27 to 28 October for Egyptians residents, and on 26 to 27 October for Egyptian expatriates.[7]

Nominations started on 1 September,[1] and lasted until 12 September (with the exception of the Qena and Qoss districts, which were extended until 15 September),[8] though candidates had until 15 September to submit the necessary medical tests.[9] Campaigning for the first phase started on 29 September[10] and ended on 15 October.[11]

Second phase: Central and East Delta

In the second phase, elections took place from 21 November to 2 December 2015 in the remaining nine governorates of the Central Delta and East Delta regions, namely the governorates of Cairo, Qalyubia, Dakahlia, Monufia, Gharbia, Kafr el-Sheikh, Sharqia, Damietta, Port Said, Ismailia, Suez, North Sinai, and South Sinai.

For these governorates, the first round of elections took place on 22 to 23 November for Egyptian residents and 21 to 22 November for Egyptian expatriates. Runoffs were held on 1 to 2 December for Egyptian residents, and on 30 November to 1 December for Egyptian expatriates.[7]

Campaigning started on 2 November and ended on 20 November 2015.[12]

Candidates

On 16 September, the High Elections Committee announced the initial list of accepted candidates. While nine electoral lists were accepted, five more lists were rejected, including two of the three lists of the Egypt coalition (Egyptian Front & Independent Current Coalition) as well as the lists of Upper Egypt’s Voice, Call of Egypt and Knights of Egypt.[13] After appealing to court, all rejected lists but the one by Upper Egypt's Voice were admitted. The final list of candidates for the first phase was announced on 28 September.[7]

A total of 7 electoral lists are contesting the 120 fixed-list seats available in the four regional constituencies:

Accepted electoral lists
Name of the list 1st phase constituency 2nd phase constituency
North, Center & South Upper Egypt Division Constituency
(45 seats)
West Delta Division Constituency
(15 seats)
Cairo, South & Center Delta Division Constituency
(45 seats)
East Delta Division Constituency
(15 seats)
For the Love of Egypt (Fi Hob Misr) Yes Yes Yes Yes
Egypt coalition Yes Yes Yes No
Call of Egypt (Nidaa Misr) Yes No No No
Independent National Reawakening Bloc (al-Sahwa al-Wataneya) Yes No No No
Al-Nour Party No Yes Yes No
Knights of Egypt (Forsan Misr) No Yes No No
Republican Alliance for Social Forces No No Yes No
Source: Mada Masr[14]

In the first phase, 2,573 individual candidates are contesting 226 individual seats. Many parties are fielding individual candidates both on joint electoral lists and contesting the list-based seats.[7]

Results

Results per party seat:
  Free Egyptians Party: 65 seats
  Nation's Future Party: 53 seats
  New Wafd Party: 36 seats
  Protectors of the Homeland Party: 18 seats
  Conference Party: 12 seats
  al-Nour Party: 11 seats
  Conservative Party: 6 seats
  Modern Egypt Party: 4 seats
  Freedom Party: 3 seats
  Free Egyptian Building Party: 1 seat

First phase

e • d 
Party Ideology Candidates Run-off
candidates
 % Reaching runoff Votes Vote % Seats
Free Egyptians Party Liberal Democracy 111 64 56.63 1,009,083 41
Nation's Future Party Populism 89 64 51.68 702,965 26
Al-Nour Party Salafi Islamist 91 23 25.27 494,042 8
New Wafd Party National Liberalism 77 21 27.27 392,138 16
Republican People's Party Populism 42 14 33.33 198,822 11
Democratic Peace Party Nationalism 57 8 14.03 155,847 1
Conference Party National Liberalism 53 7 13.20 105,975 5
Protectors of the Homeland Party Populism 51 5 9.80 89,875 7
Freedom Party Liberalism 6 3 50.00 68,926 1
Egyptian Social Democratic Party Social Liberalism 41 5 12.19 56,922 3
Egyptian Patriotic Movement Secularism 60 4 6.66 45,014 1
My Homeland Egypt Party Populism 20 3 15.00 29,971 1
Modern Egypt Party Left-wing politics 25 2 8.00 25,993 2
Conservative Conservatism 14 1 4.28 23,042 1
Free Egyptian Building Party 11 1 9.09 1
Leader Party 9 1 11.11 0
Other/Independents ----
Total

[15][16]

The results for expatriate voting during the first phase were announced on 20 October 2015.[17]

Results for expatriate voting during the first round
Coalitions Votes
For the Love of Egypt 15,529
Call of Egypt 3,076
Egypt 2,969
Independent National Reawakening Bloc 1,403


e • d Summary of the 2015 election for House of Representatives (Egypt)
Party Ideology Votes Vote % FPTP Seats List Seats Total Seats Component Parties
Free Egyptians Party Liberalism, Secularism 57 8 65
Nation's Future Party Populism 43 10 53
New Wafd Party Egyptian nationalism, National Liberalism 27 8 36 1 appointed member
Homeland Defenders Party Populism 10 8 18
Republican People's Party Liberalism, Populism 13 0 13
Conference Party Big tent, Liberalism 8 4 12
Al-Nour Party Islamism, Salafism 11 0 11
Conservative Party Conservative Liberalism 1 5 6
Democratic Peace Party Liberal Democracy, Civic Nationalism 5 0 5
Egyptian Social Democratic Party Social Democracy, Social Liberalism 4 0 4
Egyptian National Movement Party Secularism 4 0 4
Modern Egypt Party Leftism 4 0 4
Freedom Party Big tent, Liberalism 3 0 3
Reform and Development Party Liberalism 3 0 3
My Homeland Egypt Party Populism 3 0 3
Revolutionary Guards Party Nationalism, Liberalism 3 0 3
National Progressive Unionist Party Left-wing Nationalism, Democratic Socialism 1 0 2 1 appointed member
Free Egyptian Building Party Islamism 1 0 1
Nasserist Party Arab Nationalism, Arab Socialism 1 0 1
Independents Independents - - 251 74 351 28 Appointed members
Total elected elected MPs 0 100.00 0 0 0
Appointees non-elected MPs - - - - 0
Total MPs - - - - 0


Boycotts

A number of parties boycotted the election, claiming that the process was unfair. These included the following:

Rules for media coverage of elections by Supreme Electoral Commission

  • Maintain objectivity and refrain from inserting personal views in news
  • Deliver accurate information
  • Refrain from using misleading titles or pictures unrelated to content
  • Refrain from using vague designations
  • It is strictly forbidden to ask voters who they will vote for
  • It is forbidden to conduct polls and surveys in front of polling stations
  • It is forbidden to phrase questions in a way that encourages a particular response
  • Reporters must respect the right of reply[6]

References

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