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When I respond, or seek responses, I think of the Internet Republic and the people [[whump]] and the places who have made our water world Eden brave and free and fair. Permitted, required, and impossible. Stand alone or stand with, whose choice to what degree [[Thn/]] O[[thn/]]ne water world Eden under "We the people" – created by whom?

A bill to bundle “Love thy neighbor nation vacation ticket vouchers” with the sale of National Treasury Debt [[””””””thn/]] Instruments

A bill to bundle “Love thy neighbor nation vacation ticket vouchers” with the sale of National Treasury Debt [[””””””thn/]] Instruments

Short title: “Borrow only from whom you are willing to visit, or have visit you,” “Lend to only whom you are willing to have visit you, or require you to visit them as collateral labor,”

Proposed Sponsors:

==============Null Hypothesis:
Search for Egyptian parliamentary election results

Islamist Groups Leading in Egypt’s Parliamentary Elections
Christians fear mistreatment could increase.
By Compass Direct News
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CAIRO, Egypt – Islamist groups made a strong showing this week in the first stages of Egypt’s parliamentary elections, according to figures released Friday by elections officials, renewing concerns Christians have about their future in the country.

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The Freedom and Justice Party, affiliated with the once-banned Muslim Brotherhood, won 40 percent of the vote overall. The Al Nour Party, made up of members of the extremist Salafi group, garnered 20 percent of the vote. By comparison, the relatively liberal Egypt Social Democratic Party received 15 percent of the total vote.

The candidates where campaigning for 112 seats, but the total number of seats allocated from this round of voting will not be known until after a run-off election on Monday (Dec. 5).

The election results confirmed the fears of Egyptian Christians, many of whom believe that Islamists will take control of the country in the wake of the revolution that deposed former President Hosni Mubarak. Egyptians now wait for the run-offs and final two rounds of this election, another election to seat the second half of Egypt’s bicameral chamber, and then finally the election for the next president. Further wins by Islamists, Christians said, will guarantee increased persecution against them or at a minimum, entrench their second-hand status in the country.

Echoing the remarks of most Christians in the country, Marcelle Mageh, 22, blamed conservative Muslims for the dramatic increase in attacks against Christians in Egypt after Mubarak fell from power. Sitting in the Church of St. Theresa in Cairo along with her fiancé shortly after casting their ballots on Monday (Nov. 28), Mageh said the prospect of the Muslim Brotherhood running the country along with the Salafis frightens her.

“You see all the problems that have happened before they got into power,” she said. “Imagine what will happen when they get into power.”

Search for Egyptian election results

Forty Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) candidates won individual seats in run-offs of the second phase of elections. A total of 49 candidates contested in the run-offs.

According to a party’s statement, eight candidates out of nine won in Giza governorate while all six candidates won in Monofiya governorate. In Bihiera, seven out of 10 candidates won.

All six FJP candidates won in Bani Suwaif as did the party’s 10 candidates in Al-Sharqiya.

Only one candidate won in each of Suez and Ismailiya governorates. Three candidates out of four won in Sohag.

The party did not win any seats in Aswan.

=============NH:
xref: example of making a complaint personal.
============NH [Hnk] //

Search for names of winners in Egyptian election

Egypt Islamist parties the big winners in second round of voting
Islamist parties solidified their lead in Egypt’s parliamentary elections, taking about 70% of the seats up in the second phase of voting.

With the army on guard, an Egyptian election worker carries a ballot box… (Amr Nabil, Associated Press)
December 25, 2011|By Amro Hassan, Los Angeles Times
Reporting from Cairo —

Islamist parties have solidified their lead in Egypt’s historic parliamentary elections, capturing about 70% of the seats up for grabs in the second phase of a three-part poll, according to results released Saturday by election officials and preliminary estimates by the parties.

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The Muslim Brotherhood said it won about 47% of 180 seats in the second round, about the same percentage it took in the first round.

The Al Nour party, part of the more religiously conservative Salafi movement, told the Associated Press that it won 20% of the second-round vote, also matching its performance during the first phase in November.

Secular parties are believed to have garnered less than 10% during the second round of voting, which took place Dec. 14-15. Election officials said turnout was 65% in the nine provinces voting.

Some expected the Islamist parties to perform even better during the second round, when voting took place in many rural and conservative districts, where the Muslim Brotherhood is particularly popular because of its charity work.

“Islamists and the Muslim Brotherhood have always maintained their popularity across Egyptian cities through a platform of social work,” said Mustapha Kamel Sayyid, political science professor at American University in Cairo. “They have the funds and they are very well organized and many people in those areas have loyalty for them regardless of political considerations.”

Though the results are not final, the election commission releases the names of winning candidates, allowing parties to gauge their performance. The last round of voting is scheduled for January.

The elections are Egypt’s first since popular protests toppled former President Hosni Mubarak in February. Violent protests have erupted again, with at least 15 people killed and more than 800 injured in the last week.

Islamist party leaders have distanced themselves from the new protests and urged their supporters to stay away, fearing that the violence might destabilize the country and interfere with elections they are dominating.

During a news conference Saturday, the head of the election committee, Abdel Moez Ibrahim, said he hoped the ballot process would replace the need for street protests.

“After the parliament is formed there won’t be a need for million-man marches because the new parliament will come through a free and fair election,” he said.

Search for Egyptian election commission results

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A document with poll results sits in front of Abdel Moez Ibrahim, head of the Egyptian election commission, during a press conference in Cairo on December 2, 2011. Turnout in the opening phase of Egypt’s first post-revolution election was 62 percent, the highest in the country’s history, Ibrahim announced. (ODD ANDERSEN/AFP/Getty Images)
CAIRO, Egypt — A record 62 percent of eligible Egyptian voters went to the ballot boxes in the first phase of the country’s parliamentary elections this week, according to election officials.

The statistics were announced Friday night at a Cairo press conference that was called to release partial election results.

“This is the highest turnout in Egypt’s history since pharaonic times,” said Abdel Moez Ibrahim, the top official with the nation’s Supreme Elections Commission.

Ibrahim announced three winners of the individual races, but as the AP reported, other information was scarce:

A third of the lower house is set aside for candidates running as independents. In the first round, only three of them won clear victories. The rest will have to enter runoff elections next week.

Calling the conference to a close, Ibrahim said, “I’m out of gas,” and told reporters pressing for more information that they should get the results themselves from material distributed by the election commission.

More from Cairo: As polls close, Egypt closes in on democracy

Runoffs for the individual seat races will be held next week.

Complete election results (including proportional party list winners) of the election will not be available until January, when the third and final stage of Egypt’s parliamentary election is held.

Read this article for more about the country’s “convoluted” 2011 election process that will eventually determine the country’s next parliament.

=======NH:
So all that searching and two names to show for it.
=========NH//

Mustapha Kamel Sayyid, political science professor
Abdel Moez Ibrahim, top election commission official

So, inadvertent dragging of highlighted text {or remote desk top client unknown [thnk/]} per mutated the name. Thus to make sure who does not reasonably misunderstand…

Ibrahim Sayyid Moez – might be one name for a proposed sponsor,
Mustapha Abdel Kamel – might be another.
======================Null Hypothesis//

Filed under: coptic christians, egyptian christians, muslim brotherhood, parliamentary election results, president hosni mubarak, ticket vouchers, Uncategorized

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