compare
Compare two parties
Pick any two parties for a compared brief — top divergences and convergences auto-computed from the dataset, a comparative political-science brief for canonical pairs, plus the compass overlay, spider overlay, and axis-by-axis table.
Average axis distance
4.32
Lower = more similar (Euclidean across shared axes, normalized by count)
Same country · EG. Different families (islamist-salafi · islamist-sunni-electoral). Mean axis distance Δ̄ 4.32.
Where they split hardest
- Regime stance
Nour Party +5.0 · pro-regime vs Freedom and Justice Party -8.0 · anti-regime
Δ 13.0 points
- Pan-Arab vs particularist
Nour Party -2.0 · particularist vs Freedom and Justice Party +4.0 · pan-Arab
Δ 6.0 points
- Iran posture
Nour Party -8.0 · Anti-Iran / adversarial vs Freedom and Justice Party -3.5 · Anti-Iran / adversarial
Δ 4.5 points
Where they almost overlap
- Economic
+2.5 vs +2.0
Δ 0.5 points
- West alignment
-3.0 vs -2.5
Δ 0.5 points
- State & religion
-9.0 vs -8.0
Δ 1.0 points
Nour Party vs. Freedom and Justice Party
Egypt's two flavours of Islamism. Muslim Brotherhood electoralism vs Salafi literalism. Once allies, then rivals.
Origins. The Freedom and Justice Party (FJP) was founded in 2011 as the political arm of the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood (founded 1928), riding the Tahrir revolution to victory in the 2011–2012 parliamentary and presidential elections. The Nour Party was founded in 2011 as the political arm of the Salafi Call (al-Da'wa al-Salafiyya), a long-standing literalist movement based primarily in Alexandria.
Where they diverge. Both are Islamist, but in different Sunni traditions. The Muslim Brotherhood is gradualist-electoralist, with a long history of competing in Egyptian elections and operating networks of social services; doctrinally it draws on the framework of Hassan al-Banna and Sayyid Qutb but updated for modern politics. Salafism is literalist-puritanist, rejecting bid'a (innovation) and historically rejecting electoral politics entirely — until the post-2011 opening. On alliances: FJP backed Morsi's presidency from 2012 to 2013; Nour broke with the Brotherhood and supported the July 2013 military removal of Morsi, then signed onto the Sisi-era constitutional process. On state-religion: both seek Islamic law as the principal source of legislation, but Nour's doctrinal literalism is harsher.
Where they overlap. Both supported Article 2 of the 1971 and 2014 Egyptian constitutions ("Islam is the religion of the state, and the principles of Islamic Sharia are the principal source of legislation"). Both opposed liberal-secular parties in 2011–2012.
Why it matters today. FJP was dissolved by court order after the 2013 coup and the Brotherhood has been designated a terrorist organization since then. Nour remains the only formally Islamist party permitted to operate.
In their own words
One verified quote from each side, sourced.
No verified quote on file yet for Nour Party.
If the price of preserving legitimacy is my blood, then I am prepared to sacrifice my blood for the sake of this homeland and its legitimacy.
Final televised presidential address on 2 July 2013 — the night before the military deposed him — defending the legitimacy of the ballot box.
Primary documents
Most recent docs in the Tayyar corpus from each party. Click through for full text.
A Nour Party
B Freedom and Justice Party
- FJP 2011 parliamentary election program 2011-06-01
Compass
A · Nour Party and B · Freedom and Justice Party are pinned with always-on labels. Other parties stay visible as faded context so you can locate either side on the map at a glance.
Spider overlay
A is the solid teal polygon; B is the dashed amber overlay. Distinct colors so the eye can always tell them apart, regardless of family.
Axis-by-axis
Sorted by absolute difference. Δ is A − B.
- Regime stance A+5.0B-8.0Δ +13.0
- Pan-Arab vs particularist A-2.0B+4.0Δ -6.0
- Iran posture A-8.0B-3.5Δ -4.5
- Regional stance A-0.5B-4.5Δ +4.0
- Traditionalism vs modernization A-7.0B-4.0Δ -3.0
- Liberal democracy A-6.0B-3.5Δ -2.5
- Civil liberties A-6.5B-4.0Δ -2.5
- Press freedom A-6.5B-4.0Δ -2.5
- Gender equality A-8.5B-6.5Δ -2.0
- Social A-9.0B-7.5Δ -1.5
- Palestinian question A+7.5B+9.0Δ -1.5
- State & religion A-9.0B-8.0Δ -1.0
- Centralism vs federalism A-7.5B-6.5Δ -1.0
- Economic A+2.5B+2.0Δ +0.5
- West alignment A-3.0B-2.5Δ -0.5