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d-16617House OversightOther

Historical analysis of Arab Spring protests and their sociopolitical roots

The passage provides a scholarly overview of protest dynamics in Tunisia and Egypt, mentioning public figures like Wael Ghonim but offers no concrete allegations, financial flows, or actionable leads Protests in Tunisia and Egypt were driven by educated middle‑class youth using social media. Wael Ghonim, then Google’s regional head of marketing, became a symbolic leader of the Egyptian move The a

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #023473
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage provides a scholarly overview of protest dynamics in Tunisia and Egypt, mentioning public figures like Wael Ghonim but offers no concrete allegations, financial flows, or actionable leads Protests in Tunisia and Egypt were driven by educated middle‑class youth using social media. Wael Ghonim, then Google’s regional head of marketing, became a symbolic leader of the Egyptian move The a

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social-media-activismhistorical-analysismiddle-eastarab-springpolitical-sociologyhouse-oversight

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16 phenomenon noted by Alexis de Tocqueville in his masterful analysis of the origins of the French Revolution and raised again in the early 1960s by James Davies’s well known “J-curve” theory of revolution.2 Something like this Huntingtonian process has unfolded in recent months in both Tunisia and Egypt. In both cases, anti-government protests were led not by the urban poor or by an Islamist underground, but by relatively well-educated middle-class young people used to communicating with each other via Facebook and Twitter. It is no accident that Wael Ghonim, Google’s regional head of marketing, emerged as a symbol and leader of the new Egypt. The protesters’ grievances centered around the fact that the authoritarian regimes of Ben Ali and Mubarak offered them no meaningful pathway to political participation, as well as failing to provide jobs befitting their social status. The protests were then joined by other groups in both societies—trade unionists, Islamists, peasants and virtually everyone else unhappy with the old regimes—but the driving force remained the more modern segments of Tunisian and Egyptian society. Societies lacking institutions that could accommodate new social actors produced a condition Huntington labeled praetorianism, in which political participation took the form of strikes, demonstrations, protests and violence. The military often seized power in such circumstances because it was the only organized actor in society capable of running a government. The Egyptian Republic’s first autocrat, Gamal Abdel Nasser, came to power in precisely this manner back in July 1952, when his Free Officers movement represented the rising Egyptian middle class. The tragedy of modern Egypt is that there has been scarcely any meaningful political development in the more than half-century since then—meaning, in

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