1936 Egyptian parliamentary election

1936 Egyptian parliamentary election

May 1936
  First party Second party
 
Leader Mostafa el-Nahas Mohamed Mahmoud
Party Wafd Liberal Constitutional
Seats won 190 15

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Hafiz Ramadan Bey
Party Popular Unionist National
Seats won 14 4

Prime Minister before election

Aly Maher Pasha
Ittihad Party

Subsequent Prime Minister

Mostafa el-Nahas
Wafd Party

Parliamentary elections were held in Egypt in May 1936;[1] elections for the Chamber of Deputies took place on 2 May and for the Senate on 7 May.[2] The elections were held following the death of King Fuad I, and his son Farouk's ascension to the throne. The result was a victory for the Wafd Party, which won 190 of the 232 seats. King Farouk's coronation was held in the newly elected parliament on 29 July 1937.

Background

The 1923 constitution was restored on 12 December 1935, allowing for the first free elections since 1929.[3] The elections were held under Ali Maher's caretaker government with direct elections and universal adult male suffrage.[4]

Results

Different sources give different results for the elections; Dolf Sternberger et al. and Marius Deeb state that the Wafd won 179 of the 232 seats in the Chamber of Deputies,[5] with Deeb also giving the Wafd 65 of the 79 seats in the Senate.[2] David Moore puts the number of Wafdist seats at 166 in the Chamber and 62 in the senate,[6] while M.F. El-Khatib states that the Wafd won 190 seats in the Chamber, though notes 45 of the Wafd candidates were 'not official candidates of the party'.[7]

Chamber of Deputies

PartyVotes%Seats
Wafd Party794,96662.05190
Popular Unionist Party174,53513.6214
Liberal Constitutional Party157,45412.2915
National Party20,2751.584
Independents133,85510.459
Total1,281,085100.00232
Total votes1,261,330
Registered voters/turnout2,120,47759.48
Source: Khatib[7]

Further reading

  • Marsot, Afaf Lutfi Al-Sayyid (1977). Egypt’s Liberal Experiment: 1922–1936. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520031098.
  • Terry, Janice J. (1982). The Wafd: Cornerstone of Egyptian Political Power. Third World Centre for Research and Publishing. ISBN 9780861990009.
  • Thornhill, Michael T. (June 2010). "Informal Empire, Independent Egypt and the Accession of King Farouk". The Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History. 38 (2): 279–302.

References

  1. ^ "Nationalists victors in Egyptian election; With Returns Incomplete, Wafd Has 118 Seats, Against 27 for the Opposition". The New York Times. 1936-05-04. p. 10. Retrieved 2025-08-13.
  2. ^ a b Deeb, Marius (1979). Party Politics in Egypt: the Wafd & its Rivals 1919–1939. Ithaca Press. p. 332. ISBN 9780903729406.
  3. ^ El-Khatib, M.F (1954). The working of parliamentary institutions in Egypt, 1924-1952 (Thesis). University of Edinburgh. p. 65.
  4. ^ Quraishi, Zaheer M. (1967). Liberal Nationalism in Egypt; Rise and Fall of the Wafd Party. Jamal Printing Press. p. 232. ISBN 9780861990009.
  5. ^ Dolf Sternberger, Bernhard Vogel, Dieter Nohlen & Klaus Landfried (1978) Die Wahl der Parlamente: Band II: Afrika, Erster Halbband, p294 (in German)
  6. ^ Moore, David F. (January 1965). The Wafd Party of Egypt: 1936-1945 (Master of Arts thesis). American University of Beirut. p. 26.
  7. ^ a b El-Khatib 1954, p. 488.