
Sisi Casts His Vote in Senate Elections-VIDEO
President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi cast his vote this morning in the 2025 Senate elections, which are taking place across Egypt today and tomorrow, Tuesday.
The President voted at the Martyr Mostafa Yousry Ameira School in Heliopolis.
It is worth mentioning that, The Senate elections are being held domestically on Monday and Tuesday, August 4 and 5.
A total of 428 candidates are competing for 100 seats under the individual system.
Meanwhile, a single list "the National List for Egypt" is contesting in each of the four constituencies designated for the list-based system, with 100 candidates running for 100 allocated seats.
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Daily News Egypt
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Mada
5 hours ago
- Mada
Cash coupons exchangeable for votes amid ‘meager' Senate election turnout in Cairo
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The Nation's Future Marg office compiled voter lists for the district, printing each voter's name, polling station, and registration and station numbers onto white coupons, which were then handed over to civil society organizations to distribute to their beneficiaries the day before the vote, the charity director said. The organizations asked voters to hand in their white coupons after casting their ballots and, in exchange, the voter would be given a green or yellow voucher on which the same information was handwritten, the director continued. The voter would finally present the voucher to a party representative and collect the agreed-upon sum of cash. 'The voter casts their ballot in a minute and receives the money within half an hour to two hours,' the director said. They described the charity organizations' role as 'organizing the process and reducing the chances of manipulation,' adding, 'I know the people of the area; the party doesn't.' An employee of another charity in Manshiyet Nasser described the organization they worked for as playing the same electoral function, saying, 'Organizations are the ones that gather people and distribute the money to them,' and citing cash sums of up to LE200. A deputy chair of the Administrative Prosecution Authority who participated in supervising voting in Cairo said a voter had told them that those who cast ballots on the first day received LE300, while those who voted on the second day were given LE200. The official added that from their post outside a polling station, they observed that most voters were elderly or low-income citizens, many of whom approached them to ask where they could redeem their vouchers. The station, where 10,000 voters were registered, recorded over 850 voters on the first day, the official said, while only 200 voters had shown up by 4 pm on the second day. 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The Nation's Future Party described the Senate elections as a strong comeback for the party on the electoral scene. The prosecution official described a strong presence from party members among polling station monitors and officials during the two days of voting in Cairo. The Manshiyet Nasser charity employee also described the party as 'providing microbuses to transport voters. It all wraps up quickly,' they said. When the second organization director Mada Masr spoke with in Marg was asked about their organization's position on other parties, especially those affiliated with the government, the director said, 'No one knows them. The Nation's Future Party is the nation itself.'