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Egyptian Shura Council election, 2012

Egyptian Shura Council election, 2012
Egypt
2010 ←
29 January–22 February 2012

180 of 270 seats in the Shura Council
Remaining 90 seats appointed by the President
  First party Second party
  Mohamed Morsi-05-2013.jpg
Leader Mohamed Morsi Emad Abdel Ghaffour
Party Freedom and Justice al-Nour
Seats won 105 45
Popular vote 2,894,922 1,840,014
Percentage 45.0% 28.6%

  Third party Fourth party
  El-Sayyid el-Badawi.jpg AhmedHSaid.jpg
Leader El-Sayyid el-Badawi Ahmed Hassan Said
Party New Wafd Egyptian Bloc
Seats won 14 8
Popular vote 543,417 348,957
Percentage 8.5% 5.4%

Speaker before election

vacant

Elected Speaker

Ahmed Fahmy
Freedom and Justice


vacant

Ahmed Fahmy
Freedom and Justice

Shura Council elections were held in Egypt between 29 January and 22 February 2012. The Freedom and Justice Party emerged as the largest party in the Council, winning 105 of the 180 elected seats.

Parliamentary elections were held in late 2010 and were followed by controversy and repression as well as accusations of fraud.

Following similar events in Tunisia during the Arab Spring, Egyptian activists called for protesters to turn up in cities around Egypt on various specially-designated days of rages. Though violence was reported at some points, protests were largely peaceful with the army staying quiet until 10 February 2011, when calls for Hosni Mubarak to resign were at their peak. The following day, Vice President Omar Suleiman announced Mubarak's resignation from the presidency while turning power over to the military. The Supreme Council of the Armed Forces, headed by Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi would lead the country for a transitional period until a civilian government takes over.

A constitutional referendum was then approved on 19 March.

At the time of the election the Shura Council had 270 seats, of which 90 were appointed and 180 elected. Of the 180 elected seats, 60 were elected by majority voting in single-member constituencies, and 120 by proportional representation based on the total number of votes cast in the constituencies. Voting was compulsory, with a potential £20 fine for non-voters.

Party lists had to include at least one woman candidate, and had to pass a 0.5% electoral threshold to win a proportional representation seat. For the constituency seats, candidates were required to win over 50% of the vote and for there to be either a farmer or worker elected from their constituency in order to be elected in the first round. Run-offs would be when no candidate won over 50% of the vote in a constituency, and in cases where two candidates achieved over 50%, but neither of them were workers or farmers, the candidate with the highest number of votes would be declared elected, and a run-off held between the highest ranking workers and farmers.


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