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New Egyptian President Morsi faces bitter fight with military over cabinet posts | Egypt's first democratically elected President Mohammed Morsi is facing a daunting struggle with the country's
military rulers over allotment of cabinet posts in the next government, according
to a report. The judiciary and the military, which ceded power to Morsi, are now
his uneasy partners, with each vying for authority in an ill-defined governance
system that had earlier withstood constant change and manipulation. The immediate
task ahead for Morsi will be to choose a cabinet, a delicate enterprise that will
be closely scrutinized by liberal-minded leaders, the Wall Street Journal reports.
These leaders had agreed to support the Muslim Brotherhood leader on condition
that he appoint a power-sharing government staffed mostly with ministers from
outside the powerful Islamist group to which Morsi once swore loyalty. But few
secular-minded politicians are likely to savor the prospect of taking a subservient
position to a presidency that many Egyptians believe will act as an extension
of the organization. "Not many people will want to be seen as taking orders from
a Muslim Brotherhood president, certainly not any politician who is independent-minded,"
the paper quoted Mazen Hassan, a political analyst at Cairo University , as saying.
"His options are quite limited as I can see," he added. According to the paper,
representatives from two of the most prominent secular-leaning political parties,
the Free Egyptians Party and the Egyptian Social Democratic Party, said Morsi's
office hadn't yet approached them with offers of cabinet posts for any of their
members. Meanwhile, local media reported that Morsi has put out feelers for potential
ministers in his new cabinet. The newspaper, which quoted unnamed sources close
to Morsi, said that the new cabinet would be announced within 48 hours. |
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