{"id":1568,"date":"2006-09-01T13:01:51","date_gmt":"2006-09-01T13:01:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/?p=1568"},"modified":"2006-09-01T13:01:51","modified_gmt":"2006-09-01T13:01:51","slug":"2006-9-1-the-brothers-in-parliament-html","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/?p=1568","title":{"rendered":"The Brothers in parliament"},"content":{"rendered":"<div data-src=\"v5\">Samer Shehata, a very smart professor at Georgetown whom I&#8217;ve had the pleasure to spend some time with earlier this year, and our very own soon-to-be-professor Josh Stacher have a jointly written article on the Muslim Brotherhood in the new issue of Middle East Report. Thankfully, unlike most of the magazine, it&#8217;s <a href=\"http:\/\/merip.org\/mer\/mer240\/shehata_stacher.html\">online<\/a>. It&#8217;s a thoughtful and timely piece about how, in the nine months or so since they&#8217;ve entered parliament with a record 88 members, the Brotherhood has influenced the parliamentary process and has worked effectively as a reformist political force in Egypt, most notably lending its support to the judges&#8217; cause earlier this year.<\/p>\n<p>There&#8217;s some fascinating information in there about the organization of the Brotherhood&#8217;s parliamentary delegation, notably how it has not only turned out to be a professional and well-organized group in the People&#8217;s Assembly but also how it has impact the parliamentary process:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The  Brotherhood&#8217;s small parliamentary office  in Cairo&#8217;s al-Manyal neighborhood no  longer affords enough space for the deputies  to meet collectively, given the fivefold increase  in their numbers. So all of the Brotherhood  MPs stay in the Ma&#8216;adi Hotel when Parliament  is in session. &#8220;When Parliament meets,  we forget our houses,&#8221; says &#8216;Ali  Fath al-Bab, the only one of the deputies elected  three times. &#8220;We take our suitcases&#8212;even  those who live in Cairo&#8212;and stay in the  hotel.&#8221;<a href=\"http:\/\/merip.org\/mer\/mer240\/shehata_stacher.html#_edn1\"> <\/a>The MPs room and eat together, and discuss the following day&#8217;s  agenda in the hotel&#8217;s conference halls.  They also chat informally and attend plenary  lectures by speakers from outside the Brotherhood  on topics related to those they are tackling  in the People&#8217;s Assembly.<\/p>\n<p> Yet  the Ma&#8216;adi Hotel also performs a more  basic function: giving the MPs a place to stay  so they can attend parliamentary sessions regularly.  Fath al-Bab notes the difference from the 1995&#8211;2000 term, his first, when he was the only Brotherhood  MP. Nominally, half of the MPs, or 228, must be present to constitute a quorum. Should the  number fall below 228, however, the session  is still considered lawful, as only a simple  majority of those present are needed to pass  legislation. Recalling his first term, Fath  al-Bab explains,  &#8220;By the end of the night, there might be  30 NDP MPs left and they would still be passing  legislation.&#8221; But the Brothers&#8217; regular  attendance is changing that: &#8220;The NDP now  has to have 100 people in Parliament at all times  to maintain their majority.&#8221; Other Brotherhood  MPs say the size of the Brotherhood&#8217;s bloc  changes the dynamics of the legislature in other  ways as well. As Husayn Muhammad Ibrahim, vice  chairman of the bloc and a twice-elected MP,  notes, &#8220;Our presence has had an effect.  The NDP MPs are forced to be more critical toward  the government and better prepared. It has changed  how they act, but not how they vote.&#8221; The  quasi-official daily al-Ahram concurs  that the &#8220;Islamic trend&#8221; is playing  a &#8220;noticeable and distinguished role that  cannot be denied&#8221; in legislative sessions. Because of the Brothers, these sessions are more serious than  previously in Mubarak&#8217;s tenure.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The MB&#8217;s parliamentary competence is nothing new &#8212; they like to boast of this and have even produced a handbook to MB parliamentary activity in the 2000-2005 parliament &#8212; but the article explains very well how the scale of the MB&#8217;s presence has changed. For a frame of reference, I recommend reading <a href=\"\/images\/elghobashyMB.pdf\">Mona el-Ghobashy&#8217;s 2005 paper<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>There&#8217;s also some discussion of how well-informed the Brothers&#8217; interventions in parliament have been, and how they make a real effort to inform themselves seriously about topical issues &#8212; even inviting experts from other political trends, including the NDP, to speak to them. <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>This  &#8220;parliamentary kitchen,&#8221; as the Brothers  call it, is divided into specialized teams that  gather information about issues the MPs deal  with in the Assembly.  &#8220;In Parliament, you have access to a library  and a central information office,&#8221; explains  Ibrahim. &#8220;Neither is useful. A kitchen  is a necessity and all the blocs need one. The  kitchen consists of people with knowledge and  experience&#8230;. Its job is to use civil society  and consult experts to organize information we  use in Parliament.&#8221; The parliamentary kitchen  has been around since 2000, when 17 Muslim Brothers  were elected to the People&#8217;s Assembly.  But as the size of the bloc has increased, the  kitchen has been forced to expand the scope of  its activities. The result is that Brotherhood  MPs are better prepared and informed about the  issues. As Mansour argues,  &#8220;The parliamentary kitchen gives us better  tools to do our jobs.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The  parliamentary kitchen also has a second, and  in many ways more important, function. Whether  researching public health, judicial matters  or environmental problems, the kitchen reaches  out to society at large when gathering information.  &#8220;We think that anyone who has knowledge  is approachable,&#8221; Fath al-Bab states. &#8220;We  don&#8217;t just rely on Brotherhood sources.&#8221; The  kitchen is responsible for organizing the MPs&#8217; seminar  series, which has featured non-Brotherhood speakers  such as Diaa Rashwan of the al-Ahram Center for  Political and Strategic Studies, NDP Higher Policy  Council member Hala Mustafa and the chairman  of Cairo University&#8217;s Political Science  Department, Hasan Nafa&#8216;a. While this outreach  benefits Brotherhood MPs first and foremost,  it also encourages civil society activists, who  the regime and ruling party ignore at best and  smother at worst, simply by providing an attentive  audience.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Of course the Brotherhood MPs are still unable to stop bills, but they are having an impact on the atmosphere in which bills are discussed and in the media coverage of parliamentary debate &#8212; since there actually can be a real debate now. Samer and Josh document very well the public outreach that MB did during this year&#8217;s avian flu crisis. The paradox about the hysteria about the bird flu in Egypt was that trust in the authorities is so low that people did not believe government statements (who can blame them considering the long track record of lies?) The MB&#8217;s effort at calming a nearly hysterical population seems to have had more success:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Health  experts, the media and the opposition roundly  criticized the Egyptian government for underestimating  the threat of avian flu, being insufficiently  prepared and mishandling the crisis.<a href=\"http:\/\/merip.org\/mer\/mer240\/shehata_stacher.html#_edn5\">[5]<\/a> The Brotherhood MPs, meanwhile, applied immediate  pressure on the government to devote greater  attention to avian flu in order to lessen the  impact on the nation&#8217;s economy. Drawing  on the group&#8217;s organizational resources,  the Islamist parliamentarians spearheaded a  nationwide campaign to inform Egyptians about  bird flu, calming nerves and dispelling rumors  about the disease. Days after the first Egyptian  bird flu case was announced, dozens of Brotherhood  MPs stood outside Parliament eating grilled  chicken while photographers snapped pictures.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>I think you could probably find more occasions (the ferry and train disasters, the Lebanon war, the judges&#8217; crisis etc.) where the Brotherhood (cynically or not) jumped on the opportunity to a public service that would make themselves look good, appear responsible and make the regime look bad. Some call this opportunism, I like to call it politics. The fact remains that the MB is the only political force that pulls off these kinds of stunts. They mention some of this, notably th<br \/>\ne judges&#8217; crisis at length. In this case I think it was not only opportunism, but a genuine realization of the importance of judicial independence to meaningful political reform in Egypt.<\/p>\n<p>One thing I regret about the piece is that while it does a a great job of showing how competent and reform-oriented the MB has been in parliament, it insufficiently looks at the areas in which they have failed to deliver. There are two things &#8212; unkept MB promises &#8212; I have in mind, specifically. <\/p>\n<p>Firstly, around January of this year Brotherhood spokesman Essam al-Erian announced that, in light of the sectarian tensions of the preceding months, the MB would prevent a definitive position paper on its stance on the Coptic question &#8212; one that would revise their historic position or at least reconcile the sometimes contradictory statements that Supreme Guides have made about Copts over the year. This was particularly important at the time as a new informal dialogue between senior Brothers and independent (i.e. non-Church) Coptic intellectuals, led by Al Watani editor Youssef Sidhoum, had just been started. The Brotherhood never produced anything, and later a spokesman even said it the Brotherhood had nothing new to say and stood by its previous statements. I find this extremely disappointing and interpret it as a sign that the MB was not able to form a consensus on the Coptic question, which only feeds the suspicions of Copts and Muslim secularists that, no matter how reasonable some Brothers might seem, many of them are bigots (an intuition that I personally think is correct.)<\/p>\n<p>The second broken promise was made by Supreme Guide Mahdi Akef, who around February of this year pledged the Brotherhood would &#8220;soon&#8221; revise its internal charter to provide for more internal democracy. He spoke of several changes, but most notable was his mention of more open elections of the Supreme Guide and having their terms limited to four or five years, renewable once. In my mind this was explosive: one of the oldest political groups in Egypt, where party presidents tend to stay for life, was willing not only to break with its own long-established tradition for the appointment of Supreme Guide (which, in real terms, is a lot more than a part president) and impose the very limitations that the opposition is united in demanding from the Egyptian presidency. I have no idea what happened to that proposal, but we haven&#8217;t heard about it since. It&#8217;s as if after making a big fuss about how moderate they are during and shortly after the parliamentary elections, now they&#8217;ve forgotten all about it.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, there&#8217;s been a massive crackdown in the meantime, so maybe they&#8217;ve just been distracted. Still, this does not inspire confidence. One could also add their <a href=\"\/archives\/2006\/08\/05\/the-muslim-brothers-support-for-lebanon\/\">bizarre performance<\/a> during the Lebanon war, which seemed to have been pretty badly thought out.<\/p>\n<p>My own thinking on the Brotherhood is that it is in a crisis, and not only because key members are in jail. As the biggest political group in the country, it is a &#8220;big tent&#8221; that gathers a lot of people with different views, even if they are all nominally Islamists. The internal debate taking place among the Brotherhood &#8212; which we don&#8217;t know much about &#8212; seems to be at a stalemate. At a time during which they face a massive police and propaganda campaign (just read Al Fagr or Rose Al Youssef these days) they still do not show a clear indication of what they are about beyond vague ideas about Islam and more competence than the NDP. It is as if they have many well-meaning (and probably not-so-well-meaning) middle managers running about, getting to know their constituents and generally doing a pretty good job but no CEO steering the ship. Or several of them going in different directions. Their intellectual production (policy papers etc.) also, to my knowledge (and this isn&#8217;t my forte, so please tell me if I&#8217;m wrong), seems to be pretty weak. Even Kifaya, with all its disorganization, seems to be more intellectually coherent, or more to the point, intellectually <em>productive<\/em>. Now some people might say it&#8217;s unfair to expect so much of the Brotherhood. Maybe. But the pressure is on them to prove to Egyptians, and the world, that they are not what their enemies say they are. As Samer and Josh show, they&#8217;ve done that in part by sterling parliamentary work. But it&#8217;s still not enough.<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<div data-src=\"v5\">Samer Shehata, a very smart professor at Georgetown whom I&#8217;ve had the pleasure to spend some time with earlier this year, and our very own soon-to-be-professor Josh Stacher have a jointly written article on the Muslim Brotherhood in the new issue of Middle East Report. Thankfully, unlike most of the magazine, it&#8217;s <a href=\"http:\/\/merip.org\/mer\/mer240\/shehata_stacher.html\">online<\/a>. It&#8217;s a thoughtful and timely piece about how, in the nine months or so since they&#8217;ve entered parliament with a record 88 members, the Brotherhood has influenced the parliamentary process and has worked effectively as a reformist political force in Egypt, most notably lending its support to the judges&#8217; cause earlier this year.<br \/>\nThere&#8217;s some fascinating information in there about the organization of the Brotherhood&#8217;s parliamentary delegation, notably how it has not only turned out to be a professional and well-organized group in the People&#8217;s Assembly but also how it has impact the parliamentary process:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The  Brotherhood&#8217;s small parliamentary office  in Cairo&#8217;s al-Manyal neighborhood no  longer affords enough space for the deputies  to meet collectively, given the fivefold increase  in their numbers. So all of the Brotherhood  MPs stay in the Ma&#8216;adi Hotel when Parliament  is in session. &#8220;When Parliament meets,  we forget our houses,&#8221; says &#8216;Ali  Fath al-Bab, the only one of the deputies elected  three times. &#8220;We take our suitcases&#8212;even  those who live in Cairo&#8212;and stay in the  hotel.&#8221;<a href=\"http:\/\/merip.org\/mer\/mer240\/shehata_stacher.html#_edn1\"> <\/a>The MPs room and eat together, and discuss the following day&#8217;s  agenda in the hotel&#8217;s conference halls.  They also chat informally and attend plenary  lectures by speakers from outside the Brotherhood  on topics related to those they are tackling  in the People&#8217;s Assembly.<br \/>\n Yet  the Ma&#8216;adi Hotel also performs a more  basic function: giving the MPs a place to stay  so they can attend parliamentary sessions regularly.  Fath al-Bab notes the difference from the 1995&#8211;2000 term, his first, when he was the only Brotherhood  MP. Nominally, half of the MPs, or 228, must be present to constitute a quorum. Should the  number fall below 228, however, the session  is still considered lawful, as only a simple  majority of those present are needed to pass  legislation. Recalling his first term, Fath  al-Bab explains,  &#8220;By the end of the night, there might be  30 NDP MPs left and they would still be passing  legislation.&#8221; But the Brothers&#8217; regular  attendance is changing that: &#8220;The NDP now  has to have 100 people in Parliament at all times  to maintain their majority.&#8221; Other Brotherhood  MPs say the size of the Brotherhood&#8217;s bloc  changes the dynamics of the legislature in other  ways as well. As Husayn Muhammad Ibrahim, vice  chairman of the bloc and a twice-elected MP,  notes, &#8220;Our presence has had an effect.  The NDP MPs are forced to be more critical toward  the government and better prepared. It has changed  how they act, but not how they vote.&#8221; The  quasi-official daily al-Ahram concurs  that the &#8220;Islamic trend&#8221; is playing  a &#8220;noticeable and distinguished role that  cannot be denied&#8221; in legislative sessions. Because of the Brothers, these sessions are more serious than  previously in Mubarak&#8217;s tenure.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The MB&#8217;s parliamentary competence is nothing new &#8212; they like to boast of this and have even produced a handbook to MB parliamentary activity in the 2000-2005 parliament &#8212; but the article explains very well how the scale of the MB&#8217;s presence has changed. For a frame of reference, I recommend reading <a href=\"\/images\/elghobashyMB.pdf\">Mona el-Ghobashy&#8217;s 2005 paper<\/a>.<br \/>\nThere&#8217;s also some discussion of how well-informed the Brothers&#8217; interventions in parliament have been, and how they make a real effort to inform themselves seriously about topical issues &#8212; even inviting experts from other political trends, including the NDP, to speak to them.<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>This  &#8220;parliamentary kitchen,&#8221; as the Brothers  call it, is divided into specialized teams that  gather information about issues the MPs deal  with in the Assembly.  &#8220;In Parliament, you have access to a library  and a central information office,&#8221; explains  Ibrahim. &#8220;Neither is useful. A kitchen  is a necessity and all the blocs need one. The  kitchen consists of people with knowledge and  experience&#8230;. Its job is to use civil society  and consult experts to organize information we  use in Parliament.&#8221; The parliamentary kitchen  has been around since 2000, when 17 Muslim Brothers  were elected to the People&#8217;s Assembly.  But as the size of the bloc has increased, the  kitchen has been forced to expand the scope of  its activities. The result is that Brotherhood  MPs are better prepared and informed about the  issues. As Mansour argues,  &#8220;The parliamentary kitchen gives us better  tools to do our jobs.&#8221;<br \/>\nThe  parliamentary kitchen also has a second, and  in many ways more important, function. Whether  researching public health, judicial matters  or environmental problems, the kitchen reaches  out to society at large when gathering information.  &#8220;We think that anyone who has knowledge  is approachable,&#8221; Fath al-Bab states. &#8220;We  don&#8217;t just rely on Brotherhood sources.&#8221; The  kitchen is responsible for organizing the MPs&#8217; seminar  series, which has featured non-Brotherhood speakers  such as Diaa Rashwan of the al-Ahram Center for  Political and Strategic Studies, NDP Higher Policy  Council member Hala Mustafa and the chairman  of Cairo University&#8217;s Political Science  Department, Hasan Nafa&#8216;a. While this outreach  benefits Brotherhood MPs first and foremost,  it also encourages civil society activists, who  the regime and ruling party ignore at best and  smother at worst, simply by providing an attentive  audience.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Of course the Brotherhood MPs are still unable to stop bills, but they are having an impact on the atmosphere in which bills are discussed and in the media coverage of parliamentary debate &#8212; since there actually can be a real debate now. Samer and Josh document very well the public outreach that MB did during this year&#8217;s avian flu crisis. The paradox about the hysteria about the bird flu in Egypt was that trust in the authorities is so low that people did not believe government statements (who can blame them considering the long track record of lies?) The MB&#8217;s effort at calming a nearly hysterical population seems to have had more success:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Health  experts, the media and the opposition roundly  criticized the Egyptian government for underestimating  the threat of avian flu, being insufficiently  prepared and mishandling the crisis.<a href=\"http:\/\/merip.org\/mer\/mer240\/shehata_stacher.html#_edn5\">[5]<\/a> The Brotherhood MPs, meanwhile, applied immediate  pressure on the government to devote greater  attention to avian flu in order to lessen the  impact on the nation&#8217;s economy. Drawing  on the group&#8217;s organizational resources,  the Islamist parliamentarians spearheaded a  nationwide campaign to inform Egyptians about  bird flu, calming nerves and dispelling rumors  about the disease. Days after the first Egyptian  bird flu case was announced, dozens of Brotherhood  MPs stood outside Parliament eating grilled  chicken while photographers snapped pictures.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>I think you could probably find more occasions (the ferry and train disasters, the Lebanon war, the judges&#8217; crisis etc.) where the Brotherhood (cynically or not) jumped on the opportunity to a public service that would make themselves look good, appear responsible and make the regime look bad. Some call this opportunism, I like to call it politics. The fact remains that the MB is the only political force that pulls off these kinds of stunts. They mention some of this, notably the judges&#8217; crisis at length. In this case I think it was not only opportunism, but a genuine realization of the importance of judicial independence to meaningful political reform in Egypt.<br \/>\nOne thing I regret about the piece is that while it does a a great job of showing how competent and reform-oriented the MB has been in parliament, it insufficiently looks at the areas in which they have failed to deliver. There are two things &#8212; unkept MB promises &#8212; I have in mind, specifically.<br \/>\nFirstly, around January of this year Brotherhood spokesman Essam al-Erian announced that, in light of the sectarian tensions of the preceding months, the MB would prevent a definitive position paper on its stance on the Coptic question &#8212; one that would revise their historic position or at least reconcile the sometimes contradictory statements that Supreme Guides have made about Copts over the year. This was particularly important at the time as a new informal dialogue between senior Brothers and independent (i.e. non-Church) Coptic intellectuals, led by Al Watani editor Youssef Sidhoum, had just been started. The Brotherhood never produced anything, and later a spokesman even said it the Brotherhood had nothing new to say and stood by its previous statements. I find this extremely disappointing and interpret it as a sign that the MB was not able to form a consensus on the Coptic question, which only feeds the suspicions of Copts and Muslim secularists that, no matter how reasonable some Brothers might seem, many of them are bigots (an intuition that I personally think is correct.)<br \/>\nThe second broken promise was made by Supreme Guide Mahdi Akef, who around February of this year pledged the Brotherhood would &#8220;soon&#8221; revise its internal charter to provide for more internal democracy. He spoke of several changes, but most notable was his mention of more open elections of the Supreme Guide and having their terms limited to four or five years, renewable once. In my mind this was explosive: one of the oldest political groups in Egypt, where party presidents tend to stay for life, was willing not only to break with its own long-established tradition for the appointment of Supreme Guide (which, in real terms, is a lot more than a part president) and impose the very limitations that the opposition is united in demanding from the Egyptian presidency. I have no idea what happened to that proposal, but we haven&#8217;t heard about it since. It&#8217;s as if after making a big fuss about how moderate they are during and shortly after the parliamentary elections, now they&#8217;ve forgotten all about it.<br \/>\nOf course, there&#8217;s been a massive crackdown in the meantime, so maybe they&#8217;ve just been distracted. Still, this does not inspire confidence. One could also add their <a href=\"\/archives\/2006\/08\/05\/the-muslim-brothers-support-for-lebanon\/\">bizarre performance<\/a> during the Lebanon war, which seemed to have been pretty badly thought out.<br \/>\nMy own thinking on the Brotherhood is that it is in a crisis, and not only because key members are in jail. As the biggest political group in the country, it is a &#8220;big tent&#8221; that gathers a lot of people with different views, even if they are all nominally Islamists. The internal debate taking place among the Brotherhood &#8212; which we don&#8217;t know much about &#8212; seems to be at a stalemate. At a time during which they face a massive police and propaganda campaign (just read Al Fagr or Rose Al Youssef these days) they still do not show a clear indication of what they are about beyond vague ideas about Islam and more competence than the NDP. It is as if they have many well-meaning (and probably not-so-well-meaning) middle managers running about, getting to know their constituents and generally doing a pretty good job but no CEO steering the ship. Or several of them going in different directions. Their intellectual production (policy papers etc.) also, to my knowledge (and this isn&#8217;t my forte, so please tell me if I&#8217;m wrong), seems to be pretty weak. Even Kifaya, with all its disorganization, seems to be more intellectually coherent, or more to the point, intellectually <em>productive<\/em>. Now some people might say it&#8217;s unfair to expect so much of the Brotherhood. Maybe. But the pressure is on them to prove to Egyptians, and the world, that they are not what their enemies say they are. As Samer and Josh show, they&#8217;ve done that in part by sterling parliamentary work. But it&#8217;s still not enough.<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[4],"tags":[6,225],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1568"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1568"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1568\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1568"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1568"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/amrani.cc\/wp\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1568"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}