Arab Socialist Union (Egypt) Explained

Chairperson:Gamal Abdel Nasser

Anwar Sadat
Arab Socialist Union
Native Name:Arabic: الاتحاد الاشتراكي العربي
Leader1 Title:General Secretary
Leader1 Name:Gamal Abdel Nasser

Ali Sabri

Anwar Sadat
Leader2 Title:Chairman
Colors: Red
white
Black
Predecessor:National Union
Successor:National Democratic Party (Majority)
National Progressive Unionist Rally Party
Liberal Socialists Party
Headquarters:Cairo, Egypt
Position:1962-1970
Left-wing
1970-1978
Big tent
Slogan:Freedom, Socialism, Unity.
حرية، اشتراكية، وحدة
Youth Wing:UAR Socialist Youth Organization
Ideology:Pan-Arabism
Arab nationalism
Arab socialism
Nasserism
Populism[1]
Country:Egypt

The Arab Socialist Union (Arabic: الاتحاد الاشتراكي العربي

) was an Egyptian political party based on the principles of Nasserism and Arab socialism. It was evolved during the years of Sadat to become the National Democratic Party which ruled Egypt until the 2011 revolution.[2]

History

Foundation

The Arab Socialist Union (ASU) was founded in 1962 by Gamal Abdel Nasser as the country's sole political party.[3] The ASU grew out of the Free Officers Movement of the Egyptian Revolution of 1952. The party's formation was just one part in Nasser's National Charter. The Charter set out an agenda of nationalization, agrarian reform, and constitutional reform, which formed the basis of ASU policy. The programme of nationalisation under Nasser saw worth of private assets transferred into the public sector. Private insurance companies, banks, many large shipping companies, major heavy and basic industries were converted to public control. Land reforms saw the maximum area of private land ownership successively reduced from 200 to 100 feddans. A 90% top rate of income tax was levied on income over . Boards of directors were required to have a minimum number of workers, and workers and peasants were guaranteed at least half of the seats in the People's Assembly. The Charter also saw a strong assertion of Arab nationalism, within the context of historical Egyptian nationalism.[2]

In September 1963 a secret unit of the ASU was established which was called the Vanguard Organization.[4] It was headed by Sharawi Gomaa and Sami Sharaf. Following the defeat in the Six-Day War in 1967 Nasser reorganized the ASU, closing its youth branch and executive bureau. He became the head of its national congress and central committee.[5]

Under Sadat and demise

After Nasser's death in 1970, Anwar Sadat quickly moved away from his radical socialist position. This was demonstrated clearly in 1974, with Sadat's Infitah, or Open Door, economic policy, which allowed the emergence of a modern entrepreneurial and consumerist society. Then, in 1976, the beginning of political pluralism allowed three political platforms — left, centre and right — to form within the Arab Socialist Union. In 1978, the platforms were allowed to become fully independent political parties, and the ASU was disbanded. Many of today's political parties in Egypt have their origin in the breakup of the ASU.

Following the Six-Day War and massive demonstrations in February and October 1969, Egypt was in a state of political turmoil, leading to raising calls for granting citizens more democratic rights and demanding self-expression for political affiliations.

Following assuming office in 1970, late president Anwar Sadat adopted the slogans of rule of law and the institutional state. In August 1974, Sadat put forward a working paper to revamp the Arab Socialist Union. In July 1975, the Arab Socialist Union's general conference adopted a resolution on establishing political forums within the union for expression of opinion in accordance with basic principles of the Egyptian Revolution. In March 1976, president Sadat issued a decree allowing three forums to represent the right wing (the Liberal Socialist Organization), the center wing (Egypt Arab Socialist Organization) and the left wing (the National Progressive Unionist Organization).

These forums were later transformed into parties, forming today's Egyptian major political parties. During the first meeting of the People's Assembly on 22 November 1976, president Sadat declared the three political organizations turned into parties.

In June 1977, the law of political party was enacted, allowed the existence of several political parties and demonstrated the shift to a multi-party system. However the ratification of this law had not meant cancellation of the Arab Socialist Union, rather it had given the Union more powers to allow party formation.

The centre wing of the ASU evolved into the National Democratic Party, which was the nation's dominant (and de facto only) party until the Egyptian Revolution of 2011. The left wing became the National Progressive Unionist Party, which remains a player on the Left of Egyptian political spectrum, while the right wing became the Liberal Socialists Party which survives as a less significant player on the scene.

Ideology and internal factions

The Arab Socialist Union goals at that point reflected the following:

The ASU's nature (a big tent populist party) permitted the formation of three factions in 1970s that represented the various souls within the party, namely the rightist Liberal Socialist Organization (economic and Islamic liberal); the centrist Arab Socialist Organization (Islamic socialist) and the leftist Tagammu Organization (progressive, populist and nationalist).

Electoral history

Presidential elections

ElectionParty candidateVotes%Result
1956Gamal Abdel Nasser5,499,555100%Elected
19586,102,128100%Elected
19656,950,098100%Elected
1970Anwar Sadat6,432,58790%Elected
19769,145,68399.94%Elected

People's Assembly of Egypt elections

ElectionParty leaderVotes%Seats+/–PositionResult
1964Ali Sabri100% 350 1st
1969Gamal Abdel Nasser6,368,511100% 1st
1971Anwar Sadat100% 1st
19763,803,973100% 37 1st
Notes

During the 1976 election, only the three factions of the ASU ran.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Egypt's former president Nasser still a divisive figure, 50 years after his death . France 24 . 10 October 2020 . en . 28 September 2020.
  2. Book: Egypt's Incomplete Revolution: Lutfi Al-Khuli and Nasser's Socialism in the 1960s. Rami Ginat. 1997. Routledge. 0-7146-4738-1.
  3. Patricia Peghini Ryan. 9798659245712. PhD. The Arab Socialist Union of Egypt. 1972. . West Virginia University.
  4. Hesham Sallam . From the State of Vanguards to the House of Kofta: Reflections on Egypt's Authoritarian Impasse. 5 November 2022. Jadaliyya. 26 October 2020.
  5. Iliya Harik. The Single Party as a Subordinate Movement: The Case of Egypt. World Politics. October 1973. 26. 1. 97–98. 10.2307/2009918. 2009918. 153367845 .