
At a time when parliamentary elections should symbolize freedom of choice and political pluralism, Egypt’s electoral process has turned into a tragic farce, devoid of the basic principles of democracy. The absence of genuine party competition, and the executive authority — through its security apparatus — monopolizing the formation of the so-called “National Unified List,” has transformed Parliament from an elected institution into an almost appointed body.
What makes the scene even more grotesque is the open circulation of prices for parliamentary seats, where positions are sold for between 20 and 50 million Egyptian pounds per candidate, in exchange for inclusion on the unified list or approval to run as an independent — all with official blessing.
This raises a fundamental question: what remains of the meaning of elections if they have turned into a financial auction?
The sale of parliamentary seats not only destroys the principle of justice and equality among citizens but also turns Parliament into a club for the wealthy — excluding competence and nullifying genuine representation. More dangerously, it empties constitutional principles of their content and transforms the state into a structure where capital and security control the political scene — even “with good intentions.”
International Comparison: Does This Happen Elsewhere?
In any true democratic system, even in developing countries, such open trading of parliamentary seats is unheard of. While political money exists worldwide — from campaign financing in the U.S. to vote-buying in some poorer countries — it never reaches the level of officially or semi-officially selling seats under state supervision.
What is happening in Egypt goes beyond electoral absurdity — it nullifies democracy itself. Elections are not decorative tools to beautify the government’s image before the world; they are mechanisms to represent the people’s will. If stripped of meaning, what remains is nothing but disguised appointment, not election.
Impact on the Future of Democracy
This reality casts a dark shadow over Egypt’s democratic future. A parliament founded on financial power and security allegiance can never act as a true legislative or supervisory authority. It becomes an echo chamber for the executive branch, devoid of independence, repeating whatever it is told.
Such practices also deepen citizens’ frustration and apathy, reinforcing the belief that honest political participation is futile. And herein lies the real catastrophe: when people lose faith in elections as a peaceful means of change, the door opens to extremism or total withdrawal from public life — both of which undermine long-term stability.
Conclusion
What we are witnessing today — the sale of parliamentary seats in Egypt — is a political and moral scandal unparalleled in serious democratic experiences. It shows that the regime has chosen the easiest path: forging legitimacy instead of building genuine national consensus.
Unless the principle of free and fair elections is restored, Parliament will remain nothing but a stage for political nonsense, and democracy will remain a distant dream.
At a time when parliamentary elections should symbolize freedom of choice and political pluralism, Egypt’s electoral process has turned into a tragic farce, devoid of the basic principles of democracy. The absence of genuine party competition, and the executive authority — through its security apparatus — monopolizing the formation of the so-called “National Unified List,” has transformed Parliament from an elected institution into an almost appointed body.
What makes the scene even more grotesque is the open circulation of prices for parliamentary seats, where positions are sold for between 20 and 50 million Egyptian pounds per candidate, in exchange for inclusion on the unified list or approval to run as an independent — all with official blessing.
This raises a fundamental question: what remains of the meaning of elections if they have turned into a financial auction?
The sale of parliamentary seats not only destroys the principle of justice and equality among citizens but also turns Parliament into a club for the wealthy — excluding competence and nullifying genuine representation. More dangerously, it empties constitutional principles of their content and transforms the state into a structure where capital and security control the political scene — even “with good intentions.”
International Comparison: Does This Happen Elsewhere?
In any true democratic system, even in developing countries, such open trading of parliamentary seats is unheard of. While political money exists worldwide — from campaign financing in the U.S. to vote-buying in some poorer countries — it never reaches the level of officially or semi-officially selling seats under state supervision.
What is happening in Egypt goes beyond electoral absurdity — it nullifies democracy itself. Elections are not decorative tools to beautify the government’s image before the world; they are mechanisms to represent the people’s will. If stripped of meaning, what remains is nothing but disguised appointment, not election.
Impact on the Future of Democracy
This reality casts a dark shadow over Egypt’s democratic future. A parliament founded on financial power and security allegiance can never act as a true legislative or supervisory authority. It becomes an echo chamber for the executive branch, devoid of independence, repeating whatever it is told.
Such practices also deepen citizens’ frustration and apathy, reinforcing the belief that honest political participation is futile. And herein lies the real catastrophe: when people lose faith in elections as a peaceful means of change, the door opens to extremism or total withdrawal from public life — both of which undermine long-term stability.
Conclusion
What we are witnessing today — the sale of parliamentary seats in Egypt — is a political and moral scandal unparalleled in serious democratic experiences. It shows that the regime has chosen the easiest path: forging legitimacy instead of building genuine national consensus.
Unless the principle of free and fair elections is restored, Parliament will remain nothing but a stage for political nonsense, and democracy will remain a distant dream.


