Constitution-Making during Political Turmoil and Change: Egypt 2011-2014
 - December 2023

Constitution-Making during Political Turmoil and Change: Egypt 2011-2014

Constitutions are inherently political as much as they are regulatory charters that are supposed to reflect power and state-society dynamics. They must perform two functions well, but they seldom do. First, a charter must reflect to an extent the distribution of existing political powers and their social representation or else it would stand only a slim chance of ratification and acceptance. The second function is its ability to accommodate future changes in the distribution of political power and societal change / evolution, or else it would unravel in short order.
The already challenging dual-gaze balance in drafting constitutions becomes even harder to maintain during periods of political transition and polarization. Political flux in the wake of an autocratic collapse or revolutionary fervor means it is not yet possible to gauge the weight and power of the various political factions. And the rush to straitjacket a changing political environment into a body of rules unavoidably privileges some factions at the expense of others, deepening the transition’s instability and aggravating the charter’s fragility.
The challenges to drafting constitutions during times of uncertainty and political fluidity were on display in Egypt’s 2012 and 2014 Constitutions. The former was scrapped just 7 months from adoption after the removal of President Mohamed Morsi from office and the latter underwent significant amendments in 2019 – only five years after its ratification. This paper focuses on the process of constitution-writing in Egypt in 2012 and 2014. It is not an analysis or judgement of the constitutional articles or a comparative study of what these two constitutions failed to accomplish. It contends that each of the charters came into existence as a compromise among particular political coalitions. Over time, and given the nature of political-transition periods, some factions in these coalitions gained political power as others diminished. Compromises become untenable, whereby the ascendant more powerful group(s) forced a revision of the rules, and the weaker factions were unable to deter opportunism.