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1923–24 Egyptian parliamentary election

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FieldValue
countryKingdom of Egypt
typeParliamentary
previous_election1913 Egyptian parliamentary election
previous_year1913
next_election1925 Egyptian parliamentary election
next_year1925
election_date27 September 1923 (first stage)
12 January 1924 (second stage)
image_size130x130px
image1ModernEgypt, Saad Zaghloul, BAP 14785.jpg
leader1Saad Zaghloul
party1Wafd Party
seats1179
percentage149.41%
image2YakanPasha.jpg
leader2Adly Yakan Pasha
seats220
party2Liberal Constitutional Party (Egypt)
percentage224.72%
image33x4.svg
leader3Muhammad Hafiz Ramadan Pasha
party3National Party (Egypt)
seats37
percentage37.56%
titlePrime Minister
posttitleSubsequent Prime Minister
before_electionYahya Ibrahim Pasha
after_electionSaad Zaghloul
before_partyIndependent politician
after_partyWafd Party

12 January 1924 (second stage)

Parliamentary elections were held in two stages in Egypt in 1923 and 1924, the first since nominal independence from the United Kingdom in 1922. The result was a victory for the Wafd Party, which won 179 of the 211 seats.

Background

The British government unilaterally recognised Egypt's independence on 28 February 1922. The Kingdom of Egypt was established two weeks later. On 21 April 1923 a new liberal constitution was promulgated. A royal decree was published on 6 September, which ordered the holding of the first elections under the new constitution. Nationalist leader Saad Zaghloul, who had been exiled to Aden, Seychelles and Gibraltar, returned to Egypt on 1 September to take part in the campaign. Zaghloul and his partisans ran a campaign that exposed the problems of the newly established constitutional order. He was especially critical of the electoral laws, which he viewed as incompatible with democracy since they made eligibility of candidacy conditional on income. The Students Executive Committee of Zaghloul's Wafd Party played a crucial role in the campaign.

Electoral system

The election was held over two stages. In the first stage on 27 September 1923, 38,000 delegates were elected by the general population, where each delegate represented 30 votes. These were announced on 3 October. In the second stage on 12 January 1924 the delegates elected members of the new parliament. For the Senate, two-fifths of the seats were appointed by the King, while the remainder were elected.

Results

Zaghloul's Wafd Party, which had run for all Chamber of Deputies seats, won a landslide victory, winning 179 of the 211 seats. However, it fared less well in the Senate because it was harder to find qualified candidates to run for its constituencies. It won 66 Senate seats. Wafdist voters included the medium and small landowners, urban professionals, merchants and industrialists, shopkeepers, workers and peasants.

Members of Egypt's Coptic Christian minority received 10% of the seats. This was higher than the Copts' share of Egypt's population, which stood at six percent according to the 1917 census. The social origin of the Copts who had been elected was very similar to that of the Muslims: mostly wealthy landowners, but also a small number of middle-class professionals, mostly lawyers as well as a few doctors. Two-thirds of the districts that elected Copts were in Upper Egypt, and one-third in Lower Egypt. The Wafd was the only party that managed to get Coptic candidates elected in the Nile Delta region of Lower Egypt, where Copts were not very numerous. It felt vindicated by these results, which were a clear sign of the party's strength and a testament to its commitment to secularism and national unity.

Aftermath

The Wafd Party's resounding victory meant that King Fuad I had no choice but to ask Zaghloul to form a new government. He did so on 27 January, and Zaghloul was named Prime Minister of Egypt. The Wafd felt it had a mandate to conclude a treaty with the United Kingdom that would assure Egypt complete independence. As prime minister, Zaghloul carefully selected a cross-section of Egyptian society for his cabinet, which he called the "People's Ministry". On 15 March 1924 King Fuad opened the first constitutional parliament amid national rejoicing. The Wafdist government did not last long, however.

On 19 November 1924 Lee Stack, the British governor general of Sudan and commander of the Egyptian Army, was assassinated in Cairo. The assassination was one of a series of killings of British officials that had begun in 1920. Viscount Allenby, the British High Commissioner to Egypt, considered Stack an old and trusted friend. He was thus determined to avenge the crime and in the process humiliate the Wafd and destroy its credibility in Egypt. Allenby demanded that Egypt apologize, prosecute the assailants, pay a £500,000 indemnity, withdraw all troops from Sudan, consent to an unlimited increase of irrigation in Sudan and end all opposition to the capitulations (Britain's demand of the right to protect foreign interests in the country). Zaghloul wanted to resign rather than accept the ultimatum, but Allenby presented it to him before Zaghloul could offer his resignation to the king. Zaghloul and his cabinet decided to accept the first four terms but to reject the last two. On 24 November, after ordering the Ministry of Finance to pay the indemnity, Zaghloul resigned. Parliament was dissolved on 24 December 1924. He died three years later.

References

References

  1. M.F. Khatib (1954) [https://era.ed.ac.uk/handle/1842/34029 "The working of parliamentary institutions in Egypt, 1924-1952"], Appendix II Table II
  2. Toynbee, Arnold Joseph. (1927). "The Islamic World Since the Peace Settlement". Oxford University Press.
  3. Maghraoui, Abdeslam. (2006). "Liberalism Without Democracy: Nationhood and Citizenship in Egypt, 1922–1936". Duke University Press.
  4. "Democracy is born".
  5. Goldschmidt, Arthur. (2004). "Historical Dictionary of Egypt". American University in Cairo Press.
  6. (1924-02-25). "Nationalists Win in Egypt". [[The New York Times]].
  7. Schrand, Irmgard. (2004). "Jews in Egypt: Communists and Citizens". Lit.
  8. Hassan, Sana. (2003). "Christians versus Muslims in Modern Egypt: The Century-Long Struggle for Coptic Equality". Oxford University Press US.
  9. Sicker, Martin. (2001). "The Middle East in the Twentieth Century". Greenwood Publishing Group.
  10. (1991). "Egypt: a country study". [[Federal Research Division]], [[Library of Congress]].
  11. M.F. Khatib (1954) page 171
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