A comparison of Egypt’s two presidential candidates and their policies on everything from free markets to faith.

The first round of Egypt’s presidential election, in May, pitted thirteen candidates against each other. They spanned a range of ideologies: former generals and spies, conservative Islamists, Nasserists and liberal activists.

The runoff involved just two candidates: Mohammed Morsi, from the Muslim Brotherhood; and Ahmed Shafik, the last prime minister under deposed president Hosni Mubarak.