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Hossam Badrawi writes: “Dictatorship Under the Microscope”

One of the paradoxes we live with is that many who raise the banner of freedom of expression cannot tolerate a difference of opinion. If you discuss an idea or evaluate an experience, the debate shifts from analyzing the content to attacking the speaker—as though criticism were betrayal, and as though disagreement over concepts must inevitably turn into personal hostility.

The most recent example is the fierce criticism directed at Mr. Amr Moussa, the former foreign minister, by some Nasserists, simply because he described President Gamal Abdel Nasser as a “dictator.” Those critics never asked: What does dictatorship mean? And does its definition apply to Nasser’s rule or not? Instead, the matter turned into a blind defense of the leader, as though he were above criticism, and as though political concepts were flexible words to be stretched and twisted at will.


What is dictatorship?

In political science, dictatorship is a system of rule in which decision-making and authority are concentrated in the hands of an individual or a small group, without real mechanisms of accountability or popular participation. Its main features include:

  • Absence of pluralist democracy: no real transfer of power through free elections.
  • Control of the media: so that the authority’s voice is the only voice.
  • Dissolution or weakening of parties: monopolizing the political arena.
  • Restriction of public freedoms: of the press, assembly, and expression.
  • Security persecution of opponents: by imprisonment, exile, or defamation.

Does this apply to Nasser’s era?

Let us look without bias at what happened in Egypt in the 1950s and 1960s:

  • All political parties were dissolved after the July 1952 Revolution, replaced by the Arab Socialist Union, a single state-controlled organization.
  • The media was one voice, directed by the state, echoing the leader’s speeches and policies.
  • Elections were not truly pluralistic, but rather reduced to yes-or-no referendums.
  • Political opponents—whether from the former capitalist class, the Muslim Brotherhood, communists, or even some of the Free Officers themselves—were subjected to imprisonment, detention, and media defamation.
  • All levers of political and economic decision-making were concentrated in the hands of the president and a narrow circle around him.

These features, compared to the political definition, clearly embody a form of dictatorial rule.


The great paradox: dictatorship and charisma

Nasser’s case, however, was unique. Despite the dictatorial nature of his regime, he possessed overwhelming personal charisma and a popular presence that Egypt had never known before and has not known since. In his person combined the inspiring leader who spoke to the national and Arab conscience of the masses, and the absolute ruler who monopolized decision-making.

This combination made his experience more complex: a dictatorial system, but carried on waves of sweeping popularity.

To understand Egypt’s special case, one can compare it with other dictatorships:

  • Franco in Spain (1939–1975): a harsh, centralized military rule, allied with the Church, imposing decades of political silence. Yet his personality lacked the popular charisma of Nasser; he was an austere authoritarian.
  • Pinochet in Chile (1973–1990): seized power through a bloody coup, brutally suppressing opposition, killing and detaining tens of thousands. Though his rule achieved some economic stability, it was always associated with fear and terror, not popular admiration.

Nasser, by contrast, fused dictatorship with mass love. His rule was rooted in a unifying national discourse—Arab unity, resistance to colonialism, and social justice—which made the people identify with his authority and accept it, even see it as an expression of their collective dreams. Here lies the difference: Nasser’s dictatorship was not just repression, but a mix of absolute power, coercion, and collective aspiration.


From the person to the concept

To describe a regime as dictatorial does not mean denying the economic, social, or national achievements it may have produced in its context, nor does it mean insulting the individual or belittling his historical place. It is rather a scientific description of a political concept.

Nasser himself recognized that he ruled as a single man; he would declare that he was “responsible for everything.”

His rule ultimately ended with the crushing defeat of 1967, the loss of Sinai, the displacement of the Canal population, the trial of army leaders, and then his death.

Dictatorship can sometimes produce benefits, in my view, but it always degenerates into tyranny if there is no rotation of power to prevent the ruler from becoming a quasi-prophet who cannot be questioned, surrounded by a corrupt elite that can only be removed when he himself departs.


The legacy of Nasser’s dictatorship

Nasser’s dictatorship did not end with his era; it left a profound imprint on Egypt’s political style for decades afterward. It entrenched the culture of one-man rule, the absence of real institutions, and the dominance of the state over politics and media.

Even after his death, whether under Sadat’s economic openness to the West or Mubarak’s turn toward privatization, the essence of the political system remained rooted in the legacy of July: a single dominant party, hollow elections, and an overwhelming official media narrative.

Thus, Nasser’s dictatorship was not just a passing episode but a foundational model for governance in Egypt and much of the Arab world: the charismatic leader, the single party, the absence of pluralism, and state control over every aspect of public life.

Any nation—East or West—that lives the same experience under different names, with ever-renewed tools, yet based on the same philosophy of unchecked one-man rule, suppression of free expression and opposition, disregard for the constitution, and no rotation of power, is under a dictatorship.

So why the outrage when we apply the definition to describe the reality?

 

Dr. Hossam Badrawi

He is a politician, intellect, and prominent physician. He is the former head of the Gynecology Department, Faculty of Medicine Cairo University. He conducted his post graduate studies from 1979 till 1981 in the United States. He was elected as a member of the Egyptian Parliament and chairman of the Education and Scientific Research Committee in the Parliament from 2000 till 2005. As a politician, Dr. Hossam Badrawi was known for his independent stances. His integrity won the consensus of all people from various political trends. During the era of former president Hosni Mubarak he was called The Rationalist in the National Democratic Party NDP because his political calls and demands were consistent to a great extent with calls for political and democratic reform in Egypt. He was against extending the state of emergency and objected to the National Democratic Party's unilateral constitutional amendments during the January 25, 2011 revolution. He played a very important political role when he defended, from the very first beginning of the revolution, the demonstrators' right to call for their demands. He called on the government to listen and respond to their demands. Consequently and due to Dr. Badrawi's popularity, Mubarak appointed him as the NDP Secretary General thus replacing the members of the Bureau of the Commission. During that time, Dr. Badrawi expressed his political opinion to Mubarak that he had to step down. He had to resign from the party after 5 days of his appointment on February 10 when he declared his political disagreement with the political leadership in dealing with the demonstrators who called for handing the power to the Muslim Brotherhood. Therefore, from the very first moment his stance was clear by rejecting a religion-based state which he considered as aiming to limit the Egyptians down to one trend. He considered deposed president Mohamed Morsi's decision to bring back the People's Assembly as a reinforcement of the US-supported dictatorship. He was among the first to denounce the incursion of Morsi's authority over the judicial authority, condemning the Brotherhood militias' blockade of the Supreme Constitutional Court. Dr. Hossam supported the Tamarod movement in its beginning and he declared that toppling the Brotherhood was a must and a pressing risk that had to be taken few months prior to the June 30 revolution and confirmed that the army would support the legitimacy given by the people

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