For President Mohamed Morsi, the first freely elected leader in a history that stretches to the pharaohs, expectations are crushingly high. The Arab world’s most populous country is struggling to pay its international bills, and Morsi’s moves will be watched to see whether the rise of Islamists will be more about ideology or competence.
On the street, his supporters expect results.
“Morsi is going to solve unemployment, fix security and improve pensions, may God assist him,” said Mohamed Salah, 28, a jobless jewelry maker and Muslim Brotherhood voter, idling in the tiny shade of a vending cart awning on a Cairo
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