‪Global Journalist: Egypt’s staged election‬

Global Journalist March 8, 2018Egypt will hold a presidential election at the end of this month. But there’s little drama about who will actually win.

President Abdel-Fatah el-Sissi, who led a 2013 coup against the country’s first democratically elected leader, is expected to be handily re-elected. That’s because el-Sissi’s government has arrested or intimidated all viable potential opponents.

That’s left him facing off against one virtually unknown opponent – someone who was actually an outspoken supporter of el-Sissi until just hours before the candidate registration deadline.

So while most observers view this election as a sham – it’s not without drama. After el-Sissi’s coup ended a brief experiment with democracy following the Arab Spring, the country has been going backwards in many ways.

Its economy is stagnant, its population is growing rapidly and there’s virtually no place for people to express discontent. Opposition leaders have been jailed or exiled and independent media has been tightly restricted. Meanwhile the country faces a bloody Islamist insurgency in the Sinai peninsula.

Critics say things are worse even than under former President Hosni Mubarak, who was ousted by street protests in 2011.

On this edition of Global Journalist a look at Egypt’s staged election, and what it may mean for its future and its relationship with the U.S

Joining the program:

*Michele Dunne, director of the Middle East program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

*Sara Khorshid, an Egyptian journalist who has written for Foreign Policy and the New York Times

*Jonathan Moremi, an international correspondent who has written for The Daily News Egypt

*Stephen Zunes, professor of politics and international relations and coordinator of the Middle East program at the University of San Francisco

Watch …

 

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