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Egypt crisis tests opposition ahead of key votes

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Egyptian army tanks are seen behind barbed wire securing the perimeter of the presidential palace during a protest Thursday by opponents of President Mohammed Morsi in Cairo, Egypt. The Egyptian army sealed off the presidential palace with barbed wire and armored vehicles Thursday as protesters defied a deadline to vacate the area, pressing forward with demands t hat Islamist leader Mohammed Morsi rescind decrees giving himself near-absolute power and withdraw a disputed draft constitution. (AP photo)

CAIRO – Egypt's latest political crisis over a disputed constitution is posing a difficult test for the mostly secular opposition: Can it maintain its new-found unity and achieve anything beyond bringing large crowds out into the streets to protest?

Faced with a series of ever larger and more violent protests, Islamist President Mohammed Morsi has suffered damage to his credentials as a leader of all Egyptians. Six people were killed and nearly 700 wounded on Wednesday during pitched battles between his supporters and opponents.

Still, Egypt's first freely elected president is poised for another win at the ballot box — this time in a Dec. 15 referendum on the disputed constitution drafted by his allies.

"Morsi realizes that he is facing an opposition that does not agree on one thing," said analyst Diaa Rashwan, citing also the weakness of the leftist and liberal groups behind last year's uprising.

How the opposition fares could determine its future and, consequently, the fate of a country that had never seemed more divided. At stake is whether Egypt will succumb to the will of Islamists and gradually become an Islamic state, or settle on a middle ground tilted toward Islam, but upholding the rights of women and minority Christians.

The opposition has yet to announce what its next step is aside from calls for more mass rallies. Yet to be revealed is whether it plans to boycott the constitutional referendum or campaign for a "no" vote against the charter.

What is virtually certain is that no matter what the opposition's next move, the charter will be approved in a referendum.

A boycott would hand Morsi and his allies an easy win since their hard-core base of supporters would vote "yes." However, a significantly low turnout would diminish the document's legitimacy and show that the opposition momentum is still there.

Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood have stood firm by the Egyptian leader's Nov. 22 decrees that gave him near absolute powers and placed him above any oversight, as well as his call for a referendum on the draft constitution, pushed through in a marathon session last week by his Islamist followers.

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