Morsi’s Miscalculation
from From the Potomac to the Euphrates and Middle East Program

Morsi’s Miscalculation

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The excerpt below is from an article originally published here on The Daily Beast on November 26, 2012. I look forward to reading your comments. 

Last Wednesday, Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi was being hailed—at home and abroad—for playing a central role in bringing an uneasy truce to the Gaza Strip after six days of violence between Israel and Palestinian extremist groups. A day later, however, Morsi’s diplomatic achievement was overshadowed when the president issued a decree that endowed himself with unprecedented powers, precipitating a full-blown political crisis with angry demonstrations taking place in Cairo, Alexandria, Suez, Damanhur, Ismailia and other cities. Morsi may be elected, but unlike even his deposed predecessor, he is suddenly accountable to no one.

The magnitude of Morsi’s miscalculation depends on how the current spasm of unrest plays out, but the question remains what led Egypt’s new leader, who has proven to be a deft political operator until now, to make his decree. The Twittersphere has determined that this was nothing more than a power grab for an organization that has waited patiently for eight decades to control Egypt—which it was—but there is more to the story.

Looked at one way, Morsi and the Brothers clearly thought that the decree would bolster the Brotherhood’s revolutionary credibility. That sounds awfully strange given what the January 25 uprising was all about—dignity, accountability, sovereignty of the people—and the practical political effects of the declaration. Yet from the Brotherhood’s perspective, they are working to clear out the remnants of the old regime that are impeding progress. After all, not too long ago, Mubarak-era judges were the problem, not the avatars of democracy.

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More on:

Egypt

Political Movements

Politics and Government