Presidency The position was created after the
Egyptian Revolution of 1952, with
Mohammed Naguib serving as the first to hold office. Before 2005, Parliament chose a candidate for the presidency and people voted in a referendum to approve or reject the proposed candidate. Following the
Egyptian Revolution of 2011, a new presidential election was held in
2012; this was the first free and fair election in Egypt's political history. The
Muslim Brotherhood declared on 18 June 2012, that its candidate,
Mohamed Morsi, had won. Following a
wave of public discontent with the autocratic excesses of the Morsi government; the beginning of July 2013 marked the onset of the
2013 Egyptian coup d'état. This followed the decision of
General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to remove Morsi from office and suspend the
2012 constitution. El-Sisi was then elected head of state in the
2014 presidential election. He was officially sworn in as Egypt's new president on 8 June 2014. Article 133 of Egypt's constitution of 2012 originally determined a 4-year period of presidential mandate, to which the candidate could only be re-elected once. According to that document, to be eligible for presidency, the candidate must be "Egyptian born to Egyptian parents, must have carried no other citizenship, must have civil and political rights, cannot be married to a non-Egyptian,” and not be younger than 40 Gregorian years. Article 146 declares the president to be the
Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces. However, to declare war or to send armed forces outside state territory, the president must consult the
National Defense Council and have the approval of the majority of the MPs. Following a
constitutional referendum that was held in Egypt from 20 to 22 April 2019, with
overseas voting taking place between 19 and 21 April, amendments allowed President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to remain in power until 2030, whereas under the previous version of the constitution, he would have been barred from contesting the next elections, set to take place in 2022. The changes were approved by 88.83% of voters who voted, with a 44% turnout.
Cabinet Cabinet of Egypt (the Council of Ministers) serves as the country's chief executive and administrative body under the leadership of the
Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly, who has held the office
since June 2018. The cabinet underwent a major reshuffle in February 2026, involving 22 nominations aimed at addressing economic challenges and industrial localization. The current structure of the cabinet includes; the Prime Minister is Mostafa Madbouly and the Deputy Prime Minister for Economic Affairs is Hussein Ahmed Issa. Several major portfolios were consolidated in 2024 and 2026 to enhance efficiency, such as: the
Foreign Affairs, International Cooperation, and Egyptian Expatriates, led by
Badr Abdelatty. The
Local Development and Environment is led by
Manal Awad. The Investment and Foreign Trade is established as a new standalone ministry under Mohamed Farid Saleh. ==Legislative branch==