There is a parliament in Jordan, which the King is free to dissolve or just ignore whenever he likes. It's a dictatorship with a crowned head.
As for Egypt's "election", I wonder if a voter would even have the option of voting
No on Mubarak. It could be arranged so that one either votes for Mubarak or one's vote is not counted. In that case, all Mubarak would need to win is one vote.
Democracy is a state where:
- Citizenship is universal. Each person born within the boundaries of the state is a citizen, as is one born abroad to at least one citizen parent or who swears allegiance to the state in a rite of naturalization.
- Citizenship is equal. Each citizen has an equal opportunity to participate in and influence public affairs. Every adult citizen shall be enfranchised with the right to vote. Decisions are made by a majority voted based on the principle of one man/one vote.
- Citizenship is inalienable. A guaranteed set of civil liberties is in place to assure full and open public discourse of civic affairs. No citizen may be stripped of his citizenship or otherwise punished by the state for expressing any point of view, no matter how unpopular or even absurd.
As this relates to the discussion at hand, a system where only one candidate is allowed to run or a system where a group of elitists determine who is qualified to run using some sort of religious or ideological test is not a democracy.
Democracy is necessarily an open system.