Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Nominates Parliament Speaker

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The Muslim Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, which won a crushing victory in Egyptian legislative elections, on Monday nominated its secretary general to head the new parliament.

"We have decided to nominate Saad al-Katatni as the next speaker of the People's Assembly (parliament's lower house)," FJP chief Mohammed Mursi told a news conference.

A statement distributed to the press said the FJP was among six parties, including Islamist and liberal groups, that agreed the speaker's post should go to the largest parliamentary bloc.

Estimates show the FJP won more than 46 percent of the seats in the lower house which comprises 498 elected deputies and 10 appointed by the military ruling Egypt since the ouster of former president Hosni Mubarak.

The ultra-conservative Salafist al-Nour party is in second place with nearly 25 percent of seats while the liberal Wafd Party ranked third.

The spokesman of the electoral commission, judge Yusri Abdul Karim, told Agence France Presse on Monday that the final results would be announced on Friday or Saturday.

The first session of the People's Assembly is due next Monday.

Once elections for parliament's upper house, or Shoura Council, are concluded in February, the two chambers are to choose a 100-member panel to draft a new constitution.

A new president is then to be elected by June under the timetable set by the military rulers who announced that candidates can register for the presidency from April 15.

The statement handed to the press Monday was signed by FJP, al-Nour, the liberal Egyptian Social Democratic Party, the Nasserite al-Karama party, the liberal Reform and Development party and the Salafist Building and Development party.

The statement said the newly elected People's Assembly must carry out the goals of the January-February 2011 revolution that toppled Mubarak.

The new parliament must "reflect national consensus between all its factions," the statement added.

Comments 3
Default-user-icon Monica Jones (Guest) 17 January 2012, 00:10

You don't know Egypt, or you wouldn't think that for a moment.

Default-user-icon Skyfall (Guest) 17 January 2012, 09:39

@ cookie monster, although i agree with some you said, it is their choice, they chose freely to vote for extremists, so let it be, Moubarak was not saint but he certainly wasnt the supreme evil egypt could have gotten, he was the lesser evil, tourism is dead now, 80 million reproducing like rabbits think they will have incomes other than in tourism ? that was their only chance , now long gone, poor egypt , poor people, lack of education blindfolded them into voting for people hiding behind masks of " Justice and freedom "

Default-user-icon Abdel (Guest) 17 January 2012, 11:32

Why does everyone here think it's "evil" for a women to keep Gods laws?