Too weak, not too strong.
Most of the 'experts' on Egypt are running a batch of bizarre super-weird jibber-jabber about 'democracy' and 'legitimacy'.
The problem is obviously the other way around. Morsi has been too weak, not too strong. The reason for this isn't clear from outside ... maybe it's just a personal limitation, or maybe he was always a puppet of the military designed to discredit non-military rule ... but in any case he failed to grab the available levers of power from the start. He allowed the supreme court to remain from the old regime, and the court proceeded to undermine and sabotage him at every step. He did not
impose a constitution as the 'experts' claim; he gave the people a referendum on the constitution and they approved it. [By comparison, America and England, allegedly pillars of 'democracy', have NEVER allowed their people to vote on any national question. NOT ONE FUCKING TIME.]
He has done everything PRECISELY RIGHT according to the usual rules of 'democracy'. But 'democracy' is not what ANY country needs. What EVERY country needs is relative prosperity and relative income equality and relative security, by its own standards. We don't know if Morsi
could have improved those variables, but we do know that he had no chance to do anything about those basics while the old regime continued to sabotage him.
This comes back to Manweller's Rule, which I
discussed a long time ago. Or you could express it as Maslow's Hierarchy.
Democracy does not create good government. Parks, democracy, monuments and football stadiums are just optional frivolous luxuries a government might want to provide AFTER it's taken care of security and employment.
Later: Well, that story is over. The army cut the strings on their puppet after he served their
purpose. Still not clear if Morsi thought he had some chance to rule independently, or if he was just playing a role under duress. The new ruler is the head of the "constitutional court", who was the main saboteur against Morsi. Message clear. Old regime never went away, and now it's fully in charge again.