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d-23151House OversightOther

Egyptian Brotherhood positions itself as coalition partner amid constitutional reform debate

The passage provides general political commentary about the Muslim Brotherhood's coalition strategy in Egypt, without specific allegations, financial details, or actionable leads involving high‑level Brotherhood offers broad coalition with liberals and leftists for upcoming elections Claims the new constitution should be written by all Egyptians Positions Brotherhood as conciliatory to appeal to

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #030186
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides general political commentary about the Muslim Brotherhood's coalition strategy in Egypt, without specific allegations, financial details, or actionable leads involving high‑level Brotherhood offers broad coalition with liberals and leftists for upcoming elections Claims the new constitution should be written by all Egyptians Positions Brotherhood as conciliatory to appeal to

Tags

constitutional-reformliberal-partiesmuslim-brotherhoodpolitical-strategyegyptpolitical-coalitionhouse-oversight

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si liberals to attempt an end run around the referendum. "The people made a choice, and we have to respect it," he says. The Brotherhood, meanwhile, is sitting pretty. It has offered to form a broad coalition with liberals and leftists in the elections, and promises that there will be no attempt to hijack the constitutional reform process afterward. "The new constitution has to be written by all Egyptians," says Essam Erian, a top Brotherhood leader. "No one group should have a louder voice than the others." This makes the Islamists look responsible and conciliatory, and is likely to play well with voters. (See more on the Brotherhood's election strategy in posts to come.) In Iraq, it took the liberals years to catch up with the religious parties in organizational and campaigning skills. In the last election, Allawi finally cobbled together a coalition that won more seats than any other group, only to be outmaneuvered by postelection horse trading. If Egypt's liberals aren't careful, a similar fate awaits them. Bobby Ghosh, TIME's Deputy International Editor, writes mainly about conflict and terrorism. His previous assignments have included stints in Iraq, London and Hong Kong. He has also traveled extensively in the Middle East.

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