Egypt´s Brotherhood scrambling to broaden support (AP) Associated Press) By HAMZA HENDAWI CAIRO, EGYPT 05/28/12 5:18 pm ET)
Source: http://old.news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120528/ap_on_re_mi_ea/ml_egypt;_ylt=AklGEvKMGUgLQwnpKZgULIALewgF;_ylu=X3oDMTJldWZqZzBrBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMTIwNTI4L21sX2VneXB0BHBvcwM1BHNlYwN5bl9wYWdpbmF0ZV9zdW1tYXJ5X2xpc3QEc2xrA2VneXB0c2Jyb3RoZQ--
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CAIRO – The Muslim Brotherhood is scrambling to broaden its appeal to
liberals, leftists and Christians after official results Monday
showed that the Islamist group´s candidate will face ousted autocrat
Hosni Mubarak´s last prime minister in next month´s runoff for
president of Egypt.
Violence flared late Monday when several hundred people ransacked the
Cairo campaign headquarters of the ex-premier, Ahmed Shafiq. They
smashed windows, threw out campaign signs, tore up posters and set
the building on fire, according to witnesses and security. No one was
hurt. The office is in a Cairo residential neighborhood.
The Brotherhood´s candidate, Mohammed Morsi, will go head-to-head
against Shafiq, also a former air force commander, in the June 16-17
runoff. They were the top vote-getters in last week´s first round of
voting.
Announcing the final results, election commission chief Farouq Sultan
said that Morsi won close to 5.8 million votes, or almost 25 percent,
while Shafiq garnered 5.5 million votes, or nearly 24 percent.
Finishing third was leftist candidate Hamdeen Sabahi with 4.8 million
votes, or about 21 percent.
To get the support it needs, the Brotherhood must tone down its
religious rhetoric and offer far-reaching concessions, such as
protecting the right to protest and strike, election-watchers said.
None of the 13 candidates had been expected to get the more than 50
percent of the vote needed to win outright. Still, Morsi´s top finish
was a surprisingly strong showing, because he was widely viewed as a
weak candidate and because the Brotherhood´s popularity has eroded
recently because of a series of missteps.
Soon after the election commission announced the results, several
hundred Sabahi supporters gathered in Cairo´s Tahrir Square, the
birthplace of last year´s uprising, chanting slogans against the
military, Morsi and Shafiq. Similar numbers gathered in the
Mediterranean port city of Alexandria, where some of the protesters
tore down a large Shafiq poster.
Turnout among the country´s 50 million registered voters was more
than 46 percent, Sultan said.
Shafiq is widely viewed as an extension of the Mubarak regime, and
the Morsi-Shafiq runoff is the most polarizing contest possible. In
many ways, it mirrors the conflict between Mubarak, himself a career
air force officer like Shafiq, and the Islamists he jailed and
tortured throughout his years in power.
For Morsi to win, said Khaled Abdel-Hameed, one of the leaders of
last year´s 18-day uprising against Mubarak, he must make concrete
concessions on specific issues.
"A protest boycott of the election is an option," said Abdel-
Hameed. "If not, we want Morsi to adopt a package of legislation
guaranteeing freedoms, labor union activity and the right to strike
and protest."
The U.S.-educated Morsi appears willing to broaden his appeal but has
offered few specifics.
He has vowed to be a "president for all Egyptians" — a nod to
minority Christians who voted overwhelmingly for Shafiq. He has
pledged to work to realize the goals of the revolution, a promise
designed to appease the pro-democracy youth groups behind the
uprising that toppled Mubarak. And he has pledged a national unity
government.
"We are certain that the remnants of Mubarak´s regime and his gang,
and those that belong to it that are trying to bring back the former
regime will fall flat and will land in the garbage bin of history,"
he said.
Morsi´s success, said Middle East expert Shadi Hamid of the Brookings
Institution in Doha, Qatar, depends on how explicit and concrete the
Brotherhood promises will be and whether the group can reassure
significant segments of the population that view it as opportunist
and hungry for power.
Pro-democracy activists say that the Brotherhood did not join their
2011 anti-Mubarak uprising until it became clear it had irreversible
momentum and that it later abandoned them during their protests
against military rule so as not to lose the goodwill of the generals
who took over from Mubarak.
But the alternative — Shafiq — will be hard for them to accept.
"Leftists and liberals can hold their noses and vote for Morsi,"
Hamid said. "The Muslim Brotherhood is moving to the center and not
everyone who did not vote for Morsi in the first round was actually
voting against him."
The Brotherhood was empowered by the ouster of Mubarak 15 months ago,
emerging as the nation´s most dominant political force after spending
the best part of nearly 60 years as an illegal, underground
organization. It went on to win just under half of all seats in
Parliament.
But it has failed to translate its dominance in the legislature into
real political power, partly because the generals wield near-absolute
authority, and also because of the perceived poor performance of its
lawmakers.
Its credibility took a hit when it reversed an earlier decision not
to field a candidate in the presidential election. Later, it
attempted to pack a 100-member panel assigned to draft the
constitution with its own lawmakers and other Islamists.
Khalil el-Anani, an expert on Islamic groups from Britain´s Durham
University, said the Brotherhood needs to change its thinking and
cast aside the "persecuted" approach left over from years in the
political wilderness.
"They don´t realize that things have changed around them," he
said. "In order for him to win, Morsi must reinvent himself as a
nonpartisan politician." (© 2012 The Associated Press 05/28/12)
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