
People lining outside a polling station vote in El-Tagamoa El-Khamisto distract of Cairo during the final day of the second phase of the 2025 House of Representatives elections. Photo courtesy of Extra news.
The figures were published on Tuesday in a statistical study by a specialised research unit at the State Information Service (SIS).
Based on final results announced by the National Elections Authority (NEA), including the latest run-off rounds, the study offers an initial snapshot of the make-up and potential performance of the new parliament.
According to the figures, eight opposition parties secured a total of 53 seats, representing nearly 10 percent of the elected members of the chamber.
Half of these parties are affiliated with the Civil Democratic Movement and collectively won 32 seats, accounting for around 60 percent of all opposition party seats.
The distribution of seats among opposition parties is as follows: the Egyptian Social Democratic Party and Al-Adl Party each won 11 seats; the Reform and Development Party and Al-Wafd Party secured nine seats each; Al-Nour Party won six seats; Al-Tagammu Party secured five seats; while both the Conservative Party and Al-Waey Party won one seat each.
The study also showed that parties running on the National List for Egypt lost 82 seats in individual races to independent candidates. Independents won a total of 105 seats, representing more than 18 percent of the elected members of parliament.
As a result, the new House of Representatives will include 15 political parties, comprising eight opposition parties and seven pro-government parties, alongside a significant bloc of independent lawmakers.
Short link: