Presidential elections were held in
Egypt in December 2023, as announced by the National Election Authority,[2] after speculation that the elections might be held earlier than expected.[3] Candidate registration was from 5–14 October 2023 and the election was held in Egypt from 10 to 12 December;[2] expatriates voted from 1–3 December.[4]
Incumbent President
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, who initially came to power in the aftermath of the
2013 Egyptian coup d'état, was eligible for re-election since term limits were adjusted from four to six years by a
constitutional amendment in 2019, and he technically will not have served as president for more than the maximum of 12 years at the time of the election. His rule has been described as
authoritarian.[1][5][6][7][8][9] On 18 December he was reported to have won with 89.6% of the vote. The voter turnout was stated to be 66.8% of registered voters.[10] El-Sisi is set to be inaugurated for another term by April 2024 at the latest.
Background
Incumbent el-Sisi won the
2018 elections with over 97% of the vote, and faced only nominal opposition (a pro-government supporter,
Moussa Mostafa Moussa) after several opposition figures were prevented from participating following the military arrest of
Sami Anan,[11][12][13][14] threats made to
Ahmed Shafik with old corruption charges and an alleged
sex tape,[15][16][17] and the withdrawal of
Khaled Ali and
Mohamed Anwar El-Sadat due to the overwhelming obstacles presented, and violations committed, by the elections committee.[18][19][20]
Since 2022, Egypt was in the midst of an economic crisis, including record high inflation causing the
Egyptian pound to lose nearly half its value from March 2022 to January 2023[21] and a shortage of foreign currency, the latter of which driven in part by the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. Prior to the crisis, roughly 30% of the population was already living below the poverty line, with an additional 30% considered vulnerable to poverty. Furthermore, the country's external debt bill tripled in the ten years prior.[22] Egypt had put several state-owned companies and stakes
up for sale in a bid to raise money, and about half of the 2023/24 budget is allocated to debt servicing. The
IMF has also requested that the Egyptian pound transition to a fully
floating exchange rate in order for a round of loans to be released. Government spending on projects without a return on investment, such as the
New Administrative Capital, were also blamed for contributing,[23] in addition to a persistent trade deficit and continuing influence of the military in economic affairs.[24][25]Moody's labeled Egypt as one of the top five economies most at risk of defaulting on foreign debt in 2023.[26]
To participate, a candidate can either secure the endorsement of 20 MPs or "25,000 eligible voters across at least 15 governorates," with at least 1,000 endorsements from each governorate.[28] Additionally, per Article 141 of the constitution:[29]
"A candidate must be an Egyptian citizen born to Egyptian parents
The candidate, their parents, and their spouse must not hold dual citizenship
The candidate must not have been denied their civil and political rights due to a criminal conviction
The candidate must have performed military service
The candidate must be at least 40 years old"
Candidates
The following candidates submitted their nomination papers[30] and were approved as candidates:[31]
Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, current president of Egypt[35] (has received over 1.1 million voter endorsements and 424 MP endorsements; submitted candidacy on 7 October)[36]
Leader of the
Republican People's Party, Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee in the Senate (2020-2023), and Member of The Egyptian Senate (2020–Present).
The mobile phone of Ahmed Tantawi, considered the most prominent challenger to incumbent el-Sisi, was hacked using the
Predator spyware.[48]Citizen Lab and
Google's Threat Analysis Group indicated that the attempts began as early as May 2023 and continued through August, using various methods, leading
Apple to issue security updates on 21 September to
patch the vulnerabilities exploited by the spyware.[49] Tantawi suspended his campaign for 48 hours on 27 September following harassment and arrests of his supporters,[50] even though the
European Parliament warned the Egyptian government to not harass Tantawi or any other oppositional figure.[51] Supporters of Tantawi also faced difficulties in submitting endorsements.[52][53] Tantawi was unable to secure the required number of public endorsements and was thus not approved as a candidate for the election in October.[54][55]
On the evening of 2 October, small-scale anti-
Sisi protests broke out in
Mersa Matruh with protesters burning photos of el-Sisi and chanting anti-Sisi statements.[56]
According to official results shared by the
National Elections Authority, turnout was 66.8%, eclipsing the turnout from the
2012 Egyptian presidential election that followed the
2011 Egyptian revolution. Egyptian media portrayed the election as a "great victory for the will of the people," who were reportedly motivated to vote because of the country's "state of stability and security." The opposition described the election as a "
farce", marred by corrupt practices and intimidation of opponents of the el-Sisi, similar to the elections in
2018. Multiple voters interviewed at the entrance to several polling stations admitted that they had been paid between 200 and 300
Egyptian pounds (US$6.46 to $9.69) by supporters of el-Sisi to come and vote. There were also reports that security forces forcibly escorted people waiting at bus stops or train stations to polling stations for voting, and that civil servants were required to prove that they had voted by showing their finger marked with
election ink.[57]
The elections were described by multiple international organizations and media outlets as not competitive.[53][58][59][60][61]
^Truex, Rory; Tavana, Daniel L. (July 2019). "Implicit Attitudes toward an Authoritarian Regime". The Journal of Politics. 81 (3): 1014–1027.
doi:
10.1086/703209.
S2CID203513334.