The family has had members in almost every Egyptian parliament, mostly in
Sharqia districts, their original historical stronghold. A famous 21st-century election included the family's 2005 winning challenge to
Gamal Mubarak's and the
Mubarak regime's candidate in a Sharqia district with the former
New Wafd Party opposition leader Mahmoud Abaza. Family members also regularly feature in Egyptian cabinets and hold minister, deputy minister, assistant minister, and other government and technocratic positions in state institutions. As mentioned above, Amin Abaza was a minister at the same time Mahmoud Abaza was the leader of the official opposition during the final
Hosni Mubarak government. The family has also held governorships many times in both the monarchical and current periods, especially in the Nile delta but also including the likes of Cairo and the Suez Canal Zone. Some Egyptian media in the 21st century have referred to them as one of the "families that rule the country" due to the number of politicians, officials, and members of parliament it produced, and as one of the families that "inherited parliament". As of 2024, General Hani Deri Abaza, Ahmed Fuad Abaza, and Vadji Hussain Abaza are members of the
Egyptian House of Representatives. In addition, Yousra Fuad Abaza is a member of the
Egyptian Senate. Many villages in the
Nile Delta are named after members of the family. At least two city squares, in
Zagazig and another in Cairo, are named 'Abaza'. Many roads and institutions in the country are named after members of the family for example at least one street and one government school named after
Aziz Pasha Abaza and a street named after Ismail Pasha Abaza.
Forbes lists Hussein Abaza as one of the top Arab CEOs in the world, for heading the
Commercial International Bank. Another family member, Hussein Mohammed Abaza serves as an international consultant for sustainable development and green economy in the Egyptian government and as an advisor to the Minister of the Environment. He also is a member of the government's National Initiative for Green Projects. Primarily, criticism of the family has focused on multi-generational control exerted on various areas which are part of their historical stronghold. In the
2015 parliamentary elections, three members of the Abaza family won seats in the
House of Representatives and this was criticized by some in the media referring to their win as "dynastic heredity". For decades, the family had a political monopoly over several districts. In modern times media has critically remarked that "no parliamentary elections since the reign of Muhammad Ali was free of the Abazas". In an incident showcasing the ubiquity of the Abaza family's entrenchment in Egyptian institutions, Amin Abaza, Minister of Agriculture under the final
Hosni Mubarak government was arrested and tried as part of the mass trials of that government following the
2011 Egyptian revolution. As mentioned above, another Abaza was an opposition leader during this government. Initially the public prosecutor who ordered the arrest and is himself married to an Abaza, instituted travel bans on figures associated with the regime and its final cabinet. An appeals court later freed minister Amin Abaza. In 2014, the family sued
Sada Elbalad TV for the creation of a children's cartoon named 'Abaza', and the program was forced off the air. In the same year Egyptian satellite channel CBC Two aired a one-hour documentary about the family. They are also known for producing many CEOs and owners of businesses and corporations. Their combined wealth is unknown. ==Notable members==