MarketNational Salvation Front (Egypt)
Company Profile

National Salvation Front (Egypt)

The National Salvation Front is an alliance of Egyptian political parties, formed to defeat Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi's 22 November 2012 constitutional declaration.

History
The National Front for Salvation of the Revolution has more than 35 groups involved overall. Observers are concerned that the NSF will not be able to become a coherent political force because the different parties agree on opposing Morsi, but their views on other subjects diverge. The front issued three demands to Morsi during the 2012 Egyptian protests. The demands were: that the constitutional declaration be rescinded, that the referendum be called off, and that a new constituent assembly be formed. Morsi announced that one decree, granting him unlimited power to make laws without judicial review, had been annulled as of 8 December 2012, but the constitutional referendum went ahead as planned for 15 and 22 December. After the ouster of Morsi by the Egyptian military, a number of politicians from the National Salvation Front were moved into power, including three women. The coalition held a meeting on 2 February 2014 to determine its future; it decided to continue its work. One commentator named Bassem Aly has stated that the alliance "collapsed" following the ouster of Morsi. ==Affiliated parties==
Affiliated parties
The front is mainly secular and ranges from liberals to leftists. Some of them are as follows: • Constitution PartyEgyptian Popular CurrentArab Democratic Nasserist PartyReform and Development PartySocialist Party of EgyptFreedom Egypt PartyEgyptian Communist PartyFree Egyptians PartyNew Wafd PartyNational Progressive Unionist PartySocialist Popular Alliance PartyConference PartyEgyptian Social Democratic PartyDignity Party Key figures Key figures of the Front include Hamdeen Sabahi, Amr Moussa and Hussein Abdul Ghani. Sameh Ashour, another leading figure, is the spokesperson for the Front. ==Criticisms==
Criticisms
The coalition was criticized by the student members of the Constitution Party, Socialist Popular Alliance, and the Egyptian Popular Current for having members of the former regime (known as feloul). They are pushing their parties to leave the coalition. Akram Ismail, who is an activist and a former member of the Socialist Popular Alliance Party, argued the distinction between feloul and non-feloul did not matter, stating that "the battle now is between the oppressive Islamist alliance and the ascending democratic force". ==References==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com