"Nahda Program, Brotherhood Program"
The Brothehood and the demonization of the left 
"Nahda Program, Failed Program"
"Hey Erian, that's enough out of you"
The nation = woman + man
 equal rights
"Power made you forget the blood of the martyrs"
On the morning of the "Egypt is not your private estate" demonstrations,
the front page of the Freedom and Justice Party newspaper claimed
that Tahrir Square would be invaded by old regime supporters and the left.
A number of party members spoke out on the satellite channels
in the midst of ongoing  party elections,
calling the left "a quarrellsome bunch"
indifferent to the national interest.
"The left has a problem with the Islamist forces,
the forces of political Islam,
they'e a quarrellsome group
who are in opposition for ideological reasons,
not to serve the national interest."
Mohamad Naim
Egyptian Social Democratic Party
"You can read this targeting of the left in two ways:
One, the Muslim Brothehood is attacking what it sees
as the weakest link in the chain of the opposition forces.
There's another reading, which I tend to,
that the coming conflicts in Egypt
will essentially be about the economic and social rights of citizens
and the development - or economic reform - program
that the Freedom and Justice Party plans to implement,
and which most likely won't be all that different
than the NDP program, the program of Gamal Mubarak's Policy Secretariat.
The coming public debate will essentially be defined
by the social issues put forward by the left."
Elham Eidarous
Socialist Popular Alliance Party
"They didn't seem to notice that the left played an important role in the revolution
and the movement for change
that had been simmering in Egypt for years.
They were focused on the liberals,
when they wanted to insult someone they called him a liberal.
Now they've started paying attention to us,
when they realized we brought people out onto the street."
Suzan Nada
Socialist Popular Alliance Party
"Accusing the left of being 'quarrelsome' is a lie,
even though you could say that 'quarreling' with the regime is a political duty.
The left has always quarreled with the regime,
in Sadat's time and Mubarak's time.
We think stability can only be achieved
by giving people their rights,
so if I really want stability I have to mandate a minimum and maximum wage
pegged to inflation,
not by prohibiting or criminalizing strikes
 - they've proposed a law criminalizing strikes and demonstrations -
in the name of stability.
That's not stability, it's called repression."
"Socialists, socialists, we're going out on January 25!"
The Muslim Brotherhood's accusations against the left are nothing new.
Over two months ago, Esam El-Erian,
Vice-Chairman of the Freedom and Justice Party,
mounted an attack on the left on twitter,
accusing them of taking foreign funding,
calling them 'factionalist', describing them as 'failures'
and accusing them of contempt for religion.
"Part of the Brotherhood's internal struggle
over the leadership of the party
involved actively wooing the votes of its conservative wing.
They could only do that by attacking the left
- this was always a Muslim Brotherhood discourse anyway."
"A problem for the Islamists - even the moderates -
is that they imagine that the Egyptian people,
Egyptian society, will accept the exploitation of religion
for political purposes
We don't believe that."
"The Freedom and Justice Party - the MB -
constantly needs to rally its base.
Basicallly in a situation where they're stumbling politically
they have to energize their base
on the back of the opposition.
For example, right after the presidential elections
they mounted a vicious and drawn-out campaign
against Hamdeen Sabbahi and Dr. Mohammad El-Baradie."
According to analysts, the Brotherhood's escalating language
has unsettled the political street,
and set alarm bells ringing
over the future of relations between the ruling party
and the opposition in revolutionary Egypt.
