Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "2012 Egyptian presidential election" in English language version.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)Despite performing relatively well, Sabahi, Aboul Fotouh, and Moussa appeared to split each other's votes. In the final results, Morsi and Shafiq took the first and second spots to compete in the run-off
Three candidates were thought to be out of the running: Mohamed Morsi, because of his radical views and discourse; Ahmed Shafiq, because of his relations with Mubarak … the non-Islamist vote had been split three ways
Despite performing relatively well, Sabahi, Aboul Fotouh, and Moussa appeared to split each other's votes. In the final results, Morsi and Shafiq took the first and second spots to compete in the run-off
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)Three candidates were thought to be out of the running: Mohamed Morsi, because of his radical views and discourse; Ahmed Shafiq, because of his relations with Mubarak … the non-Islamist vote had been split three ways
candidates who advanced to the runoff were extremely polarizing: the Islamist Morsi and the Mubarak regime holdover Shafik. Just under half the first-round votes went to the other three candidates, who were more in the middle of Egypt's political spectrum. The moderate vote split in three
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)candidates who advanced to the runoff were extremely polarizing: the Islamist Morsi and the Mubarak regime holdover Shafik. Just under half the first-round votes went to the other three candidates, who were more in the middle of Egypt's political spectrum. The moderate vote split in three
Despite performing relatively well, Sabahi, Aboul Fotouh, and Moussa appeared to split each other's votes. In the final results, Morsi and Shafiq took the first and second spots to compete in the run-off