Supporters of the Egyptian Social Democratic party attend a demonstration calling for human rights in Cairo Egypt, Monday, Jan. 2, 2012. The banners in Arabic, read, "no to Mubarak's oppressive regime, Egyptians must wait for their freedom, the people still want justice." (AP Photo/Mohammed Abu Zaid)
Supporters of the Egyptian Social Democratic party attend a demonstration calling for human rights in Cairo Egypt, Monday, Jan. 2, 2012. The banners in Arabic, read, "no to Mubarak's oppressive regime, Egyptians must wait for their freedom, the people still want justice." (AP Photo/Mohammed Abu Zaid)
CAIRO (AP) ? Egyptians lined up in front of polling centers in nine provinces to cast their ballots Tuesday in the third and final round of the country's first parliamentary elections following the ouster of Hosni Mubarak.
Some 14 million voters in a third of Egypt's 27 provinces are to elect 150 members of parliament. The two-day balloting is taking place in areas known as strongholds of Islamist parties and is unlikely to change the outcome of the elections.
Islamist parties are expected to consolidate their gains from the first two rounds and win the majority in the 498-seat lower house. An alliance led by the most influential Islamic group, the Muslim Brotherhood, and the ultraconservative Salafi group have gained nearly 70 percent of the vote in the first two stages.
Liberal and secular groups that led the uprising that forced Mubarak from power have performed poorly in the staggered elections, which started Nov. 28.
The exact numbers of seats won by each group so far could not be known because of the complicated voting system Egypt is using.
Some seats are determined in a direct race between candidates, while others are divvied out in proportion to each party's acquired percentage of overall votes. The election commission is to announce the actual numbers of seats at the end of the entire process. Final election results are due to be announced Jan. 13.
One of the parliament's first tasks will be to select a 100-member panel to draft the country's new constitution.
The three rounds are for Egypt's legislative People's Assembly. The vote for the less powerful Shura Council will follow in late January and both houses are to begin their session in March.
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