• 01:10
  • Thursday ,09 November 2017
العربية

Egypt to issue new parliamentary elections law, in line with constitution

By-Ahram

Home News

00:11

Thursday ,09 November 2017

Egypt to issue new parliamentary elections law, in line with constitution

New legislation amending Egypt s parliamentary elections law, bringing it in line with the 2014 Constitution, will be referred to parliament soon, a member of a government legislative reform committee told reporters Wednesday. 

According to lawmaker Salah Fawzi, a constitutional law professor, the new law will be different as the constitution s articles 243 and 244 stipulate that young people, Christians, physically challenged persons, and Egyptian expatriates should be represented only in the first parliament to be elected after promulgation of the 2014 constitution.
 
“This constitutional stipulation was translated into articles 4 and 5 in the current parliamentary elections law – officially known as the House of Representatives  Election Law – and in the creation of the current parliament that was elected in 2016 after the constitution was passed in 2014,” argued Fawzi, adding: “But as these articles have no longer become viable, it became necessary that the law be changed to eliminate this stipulation.” 
 
Fawzi also revealed that the new law will be drafted in line with Article 102 of the constitution, which stipulates that the total number of elected MPs should not be less than 450, in addition to a number of appointees to be named by the president of the republic.
 
Fawzi added: “The new law will also observe the constitution in terms of identifying the opinion of the National Electoral Commission (NEC), which is in charge of supervising all of Egypt s elections and referendums.”
 
“The NEC is the institution responsible for implementing parliamentary elections law, and so the government has to seek the opinion of its members ahead of referring the new law to parliament,” said Fawzi.
 
Fawzi indicated that Egypt s 2014 Constitution refrained from imposing a certain electoral system on the nation. “It only stipulates that the government and parliament should observe equality and transparency in drafting any parliamentary election laws,” he added.
 
A mixed election system was adopted in Egypt s 2015 parliamentary polls, allocating two-thirds of seats to party-based candidates (448 MPs) and one third to independents (120 MPs), in addition to 28 appointed MPs.
 
Parliament speaker Ali Abdel-Aal surprised MPs in a plenary session Monday by revealing that a new parliamentary election law will be discussed by the House within one month. He said the new law might adopt the individual candidacy system that had been in effect in Egypt between 1990 and 2010.
 
“This system obliges MPs to attend parliament s plenary meetings and those who fail to do so usually pay a heavy price when running in elections,” said Abdel-Aal.
 
At the end of Monday s plenary session, Abdel-Aal also warned MPs that “Those who fail to attend parliament s plenary meetings at 10am every day will not be allowed to enter the House s main hall.” He also announced that parliament s Pharaonic Hall, where MPs can take drinks, will be closed as long as the House begins holding plenary meetings.
 
“In the US Congress, members are always keen to come to plenary meetings on time, especially when there is a vote on important laws, and you have to be like this,” said Abdel-Aal.