al-Ghad party

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حزب الغد
al-Ghad party
Party of the Morning Logo.jpg
Party leader Moussa Moustafa Moussa
founding 2004 by Aiman ​​Nur
Headquarters Cairo , Egypt
Alignment liberal democratic , reformist
Colours) orange
International connections Arab Alliance for Freedom and Democracy
Website http://www.elghad.com

The al-Ghad party ( Arabic حزب الغد, DMG Ḥizb al-Ġad  ' Morning Party ') is an active party in Egypt that was officially approved in October 2004.

The party's political profile is described as centrist , liberal and secular . According to its own statements, the party's goal is to represent a liberal-democratic perspective as well as a commitment to human rights .

The party was so far one of a total of 18 officially recognized parties in Egypt. The al-Ghad party has so far been represented by a few members in the Egyptian lower house, the popular assembly (Arabic: Majlis al-Schaʿb). The party does not currently have any seats in the Upper House of Parliament .

history

At the first party conference in October 2004, Aiman ​​Nur , a member of parliament and a practicing lawyer, was elected party chairman. The party was founded by former members of the New Wafd Party . Aiman ​​Nur used the party as a platform to call for constitutional reforms that limit the powers of the president and for open presidential elections that allow multiple candidates to participate.

The official al-Ghad party, led by Moussa Moustafa Moussa , is running as an independent list in the parliamentary elections in Egypt 2011/2012 . A split off faction, the morning party of the revolution , is now led by Aiman ​​Nur and forms a democratic alliance with the Islamist Freedom and Justice Party of the Muslim Brotherhood until it merged into the conference party of Amr Mussa .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Dorsheimer, Sabine: The Egyptian system of government under Hosni Mubarak and the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood on government practice . GRIN Verlag, 2009, p. 9 ( online [accessed December 7, 2011]).
  2. ^ Gertel, Jörg: Globalized food crises: Cairo rupture zone . transcript Verlag, 2010, p. 254 ( online [accessed December 7, 2011]).
  3. Steinvorth, Daniel and Volkhard Windfuhr: Opposition parties: Mubarak's opponents come out of cover. In: Spiegel Online. January 30, 2011, accessed December 7, 2011 .
  4. a b Political Party Monitor Egypt 2011. Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung , November 27, 2011, accessed on May 20, 2012 .