Nail-Biter Turkish Election Heads for Round 2 as
Majority Eludes Erdogan
After two decades in power, a struggling Recep Tayyip
Erdogan has two more weeks to persuade Turkish voters that he should continue
as president.
By Ben
Hubbard and Gulsin Harman
Published
May 14, 2023
Updated May
15, 2023, 1:10 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/14/world/europe/turkey-erdogan-presidential-election.html
ANKARA,
Turkey — Turkey’s presidential election appeared on Sunday to be headed for a
runoff after the incumbent, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, failed to win a majority of
the vote, a result that left the longtime leader struggling to stave off the
toughest political challenge of his career.
The outcome
of the vote set the stage for a two-week battle between Mr. Erdogan and Kemal
Kilicdaroglu, the opposition leader, to secure victory in a May 28 runoff that
may reshape Turkey’s political landscape.
With the
unofficial count nearly completed, Mr. Erdogan received 49.4 percent of the
vote to Mr. Kilicdaroglu’s 44.8 percent, according to the state-run Anadolu
news agency.
But both
sides claimed to be ahead.
“Although
the final results are not in yet, we are leading by far,” Mr. Erdogan told supporters
gathered outside his party’s headquarters in Ankara, the capital.
Speaking at
his own party’s headquarters, Mr. Kilicdaroglu said the vote would express the
“nation’s will.” He said, “We are here until each and every vote is counted.’’
The
competing claims came early Monday after a nail-biter evening during which each
camp accused the other of announcing misleading information. Mr. Erdogan warned
the opposition on Twitter against “usurping the national will” and called on
his party faithful “not to leave the polling stations, no matter what, until
the results are finalized.”
Opposition
politicians disputed the preliminary totals reported by Anadolu, saying that
their own figures collected directly from polling stations showed Mr.
Kilicdaroglu in the lead.
At stake is
the course of a NATO member that has managed to unsettle many of its Western
allies by maintaining warm ties with the Kremlin. One of the world’s 20 largest
economies, Turkey has an array of political and economic ties that span Asia,
Africa, Europe and the Middle East, and its domestic and foreign policies could
shift profoundly depending on who wins.
The vote
was in many ways a referendum on the performance of Mr. Erdogan, Turkey’s
dominant politician for 20 years.
After he
became prime minister in 2003, he presided over a period of tremendous economic
growth that transformed Turkish cities and lifted millions of Turks out of
poverty. Internationally, he was hailed as a new model of a democratic
Islamist, one who was pro-business and wanted strong ties with the West.
But over
the past decade, Mr. Erdogan’s critics grew both at home and abroad. He faced
mass protests against his governing style in 2013, and in 2016, two years after
he became president, he survived a coup attempt. Along the way, he seized opportunities to
sideline rivals and gather more power into his hands, drawing accusations from
the political opposition that he was tipping the country into autocracy.
Since 2018,
a sinking currency and inflation that official figures say exceeded 80 percent
last year and was 44 percent last month have eroded the value of Turks’ savings
and salaries.
Mr.
Erdogan’s inability to clinch a victory in the first round of voting on Sunday
confirmed a decline in his standing among voters angry with his stewardship of
the economy and his consolidation of power. In his last election, in 2018, he
won outright against three other candidates with 53 percent of the vote. His
closest challenger received 31 percent.
On Sunday,
one voter, Fatma Cay, said she had
supported Mr. Erdogan in the past but did not do so this time, in part because
she was angry at how expensive foodstuffs like onions had become.
“He has
forgotten where he comes from,” said Ms. Cay, 70. “This nation can raise
someone up, but we also know how to bring someone down.”
Still, she
did not flip to Mr. Kilicdaroglu, voting instead for a third candidate, Sinan
Ogan, who received about 5 percent of the vote. The elimination of Mr. Ogan
could give an edge to Mr. Erdogan in the runoff, as Mr. Ogan’s right-wing
nationalist followers are more likely to prefer him.
Mr. Erdogan
remains popular with rural, working class and religious voters, who credit him
with developing the country, enhancing its international standing and expanding
the rights of devout Muslims in Turkey’s staunchly secular state.
“We just
love Erdogan,” said Halil Karaaslan, a retiree. “He has built everything:
roads, bridges and drones. People are comfortable and in peace.”
That, Mr.
Karaaslan said, was more important than rising prices. “There is no economic crisis,”
he said. “Sure, things are expensive, but salaries are almost as high. It
balances.”
Seeking to
capitalize on voter frustration, a coalition of six opposition parties came
together to challenge Mr. Erdogan, backing a joint candidate, Mr. Kilicdaroglu.
Mr.
Kilicdaroglu, a former civil servant who ran Turkey’s social security
administration before leading Turkey’s largest opposition party, campaigned as
the antithesis of Mr. Erdogan. Offering a contrast to Mr. Erdogan’s tough-guy
rhetoric, Mr. Kilicdaroglu filmed campaign videos in his modest kitchen,
talking about daily issues like the price of onions.
Sunday’s
vote was also held to determine the makeup of Turkey’s 600-member Parliament,
although the results for those seats were not expected until Monday. The
Parliament lost significant power when the country changed to a presidential
system after a referendum backed by Mr. Erdogan in 2017. The opposition has
vowed to return the country to a parliamentary system.
Adding to
the importance of these elections for many Turks is that 2023 marks the 100th
anniversary of the country’s founding as a republic after the collapse of the
Ottoman Empire. A national celebration is scheduled for the anniversary, on
Oct. 29, and the president will preside over it.
The
election was also driven by issues that have long polarized Turkish society,
like the proper place for religion in a state committed to strict secularism.
In his 11 years as prime minister and nine as president, Mr. Erdogan has
expanded religious education and eased rules that restricted religious dress.
Derya Akca,
29, cited her desire to cover her hair as a primary reason she supported Mr.
Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party. “They defend my freedom to wear a head
scarf, which is the most important factor for me,” said Ms. Akca, who works in
an Istanbul clothing store.
She
recalled being so embarrassed after a college professor humiliated her in front
of the class that she quit school, a decision she now regrets. “I felt like an
outsider,” she said. “I now wish I had stayed and fought.”
But
elsewhere in the city, Deniz Deniz, the co-owner of a bar popular with the
city’s L.G.B.T.Q. community, bemoaned how the number of such establishments had
diminished in the past decade of Mr. Erdogan’s tenure.
“I want so
much to change,” Mr. Deniz said. “I want a country where LGBT+ folk and women
aren’t rejected. I want an egalitarian and democratic country.”
In Turkey’s
southern region, which was devastated by powerful earthquakes in February that
killed more than 50,000 people, many voters took out their anger at the
government's response at the ballot box.
“We had an
earthquake and the government didn’t even intervene,” said Rasim Dayanir, a
quake survivor who voted for Mr. Kilicdaroglu. “But our minds were made up
before the earthquake.”
Mr.
Dayanir, 25, had fled the city of Antakya, which was largely destroyed in the
quake, but returned with eight family members to vote on Sunday.
He stood
amid hundreds of voters who had lined up to vote inside of a primary school.
Others cast votes in shipping containers that had been set up to replace
destroyed polling places. Mr. Dayanir said his uncle, aunt and other members of
his family had been killed in the quake.
“We are
hopeful,” he said. “We believe in change.”
Ben Hubbard
reported from Ankara, and Gulsin Harman from Istanbul. Reporting was
contributed by Elif Ince from Istanbul, Safak Timur from Ankara and Nimet Kirac
from Antakya.
Ben Hubbard
is the Istanbul bureau chief. He has spent more than a dozen years in the Arab
world, including Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Yemen. He is the
author of “MBS: The Rise to Power of Mohammed bin Salman.” @NYTBen





Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário