Tough 2011 for Muslim Brotherhood?

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A veiled woman holds up a copy of the Quran at an anti-Mubarak demonstration at the Society of Lawyers in downtown Cairo on September 1, 2005. Under intense security measures and with hundreds of riot troops deployed, demonstrators from three opposition parties, including the banned Muslim Brotherhood, gathered outside the Union of Lawyers in downtown Cairo calling on the ouster of incumbent President Hosni Mubarak, the release of political prisoners and suspension of emergency (martial) law under which Egypt has been ruled for over two decades. (UPI Photo/Stewart Innes)
A veiled woman holds up a copy of the Quran at an anti-Mubarak demonstration at the Society of Lawyers in downtown Cairo on September 1, 2005. Under intense security measures and with hundreds of riot troops deployed, demonstrators from three opposition parties, including the banned Muslim Brotherhood, gathered outside the Union of Lawyers in downtown Cairo calling on the ouster of incumbent President Hosni Mubarak, the release of political prisoners and suspension of emergency (martial) law under which Egypt has been ruled for over two decades. (UPI Photo/Stewart Innes) | License Photo

CAIRO, Dec. 27 (UPI) -- The Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt's largest opposition movement, faces political hurdles in 2011 after failing to land a seat in recent elections, analysts said.

Only 14 opposition candidates managed to take seats on the 508-seat Parliament, wiping Muslim Brotherhood candidates off the political map in an early December vote. The Muslim Brotherhood pulled out of a second round of voting because it said the election was fixed.

Mokhtar Mough, whom Egyptian newspaper al-Masry al-Youm identifies as a leader of a faction of the Muslim Brotherhood that favored an early political boycott, said the opposition movement should reflect on its strategy after the election.

"The Muslim Brotherhood should endorse a strategy of a national civil reform group," he said. "In other words, the group's struggle should revolve around national issues rather than stay limited to the group's main concern with self-protection."

The main political movement ignored calls for a boycott, saying the best way to challenge the ruling National Democratic Party was to participate at the polls. Hossam Taman, an Egyptian author and expert on Islamist movements, told the Egyptian newspaper that the opposition group needed to embrace internal reform.

"Without a comprehensive revision, the Muslim Brotherhood will remain a burden and an obstacle to political reform in Egypt," he was quoted as saying.

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