Turkey’s Erdoğan wins again
The president extends his 20 years in power, vowing to
build ‘Turkey’s century.’
BY ELÇIN
POYRAZLAR
MAY 28,
2023 7:53 PM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/turkey-erdogan-set-for-election-victory/
Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan will begin another five years as Turkey’s president after
winning a divisive election that at one point seemed to threaten his hold on
power.
The
69-year-old, who has dominated his country’s politics for two decades, was set
to win the runoff vote by 52 percent to 48 percent, with more than 99 percent
of ballot boxes counted, beating opposition candidate Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu,
according to preliminary official results from Turkey’s Supreme Election
Council.
Erdoğan
declared victory in front of his residence in Istanbul, singing his campaign
song before his speech. “I thank our nation, which gave us the responsibility
of governing again for the next five years,” he said.
“We have
opened the door of Turkey’s century without compromising our democracy,
development and our objectives,” he added.
The
triumphant president continued his campaign tactic of targeting LGBTQ+ people.
“Can LGBT infiltrate AK Party or other members of the People’s Alliance [the
broader coalition backing Erdoğan]? Family is sacred to us,” he said.
Erdoğan’s
supporters celebrated in the streets of Turkey’s major cities and towns. Tens
of thousands gathered in Ankara at the palace later in the night to hear him
speak again.
Turkey’s
place as a key NATO power at the junction of Europe and the Middle East has
made the election one of the most closely watched political contests in the
world this year. With Erdoğan embarking on another five-year term, he is in a
powerful position to influence not only the future direction of democracy in
the 85 million strong country but also to shape politics in the region and
beyond.
Turkey’s
pivotal role in negotiating the Black Sea grain deal, which allowed Ukraine to
resume shipping wheat to a hungry world, highlights Erdoğan’s impact on international
affairs. He is rare among NATO leaders in maintaining good relations with
Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, even after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
On Sunday
night, Putin and French leader Emmanuel Macron were among those to congratulate
Erdoğan on his victory. Putin told Erdoğan the outcome was “a natural result of
your selfless work” and “clear evidence” that voters backed Turkey’s
“independent foreign policy.” U.S. President Joe Biden was also quick to offer
his congratulations. “I look forward to continuing to work together as NATO
Allies on bilateral issues and shared global challenges,” Biden tweeted.
Bitter
campaign
Erdoğan’s
victory followed a bitter and closely fought campaign in which he accused his
rival of being linked to terrorism and argued that the country faced chaos if
the six-party opposition alliance came to power.
He has
ruled Turkey since 2003, first as prime minister and then as president, and the
election has been widely seen as a defining moment for the country.
Erdoğan’s
supporters say he has made the country stronger, but his critics argue that his
authoritarian approach to power is fatally undermining Turkey’s democracy.
Kılıçdaroğlu
said it had been “the most unfair election process in years” in his own post-election
speech.
“All the
resources of the state have been mobilized for one political party. They have
been spread at the feet of one man,” he said. The opposition candidate gave no
indication that he was planning to resign, adding that the struggle would go
on.
Erdogan
taunted his rival, saying: “Bye, bye, bye Kemal.”
By contrast
with earlier elections in which the president and his Islamist-oriented AK
party easily beat their secular rivals, Erdoğan headed into this May’s contest
behind in the polls. But he defied the pollsters on May 14, falling just short
of an outright majority in the first round, a result that triggered Sunday’s
runoff vote.
His
reelection campaign had to contend with economic problems such as painfully
high inflation — currently 43 percent — and a weak currency, as well as the
legacy of February’s devastating earthquake. At least 50,000 died in the
disaster and the government was criticized for poor construction standards and
its own slow response.
But
Erdoğan’s first round performance on May 14 put him five percentage points
ahead of Kılıçdaroğlu and just a few hundred thousand votes short of an
absolute majority.
The
opposition candidate then shifted to a more nationalist stance, promising to
deport millions of Syrians and Afghans, but that move proved ultimately
unsuccessful. Sinan Oğan, the nationalist candidate who won 5 percent in the
first round then endorsed Erdoğan, not Kılıçdaroğlu.
Political
analysts say Erdoğan’s victory highlights the polarization in Turkish society,
particularly divisions between Islamists and secularists. While much of
Turkey’s coastline, the big cities and the largely Kurdish southeast voted for
Kılıçdaroğlu, the heartlands strongly favored Erdoğan.
Opposition
supporters also argue that the election reflected Erdoğan’s grip on power,
including his near-total influence on the country’s media, which is largely
controlled by groups friendly toward the governing party.
After
Kılıçdaroğlu’s candidacy was backed by Turkey’s main pro-Kurdish party, Erdoğan
accused his rival of being in league with Kurdish terrorists, showing a
doctored video in the closing days of the campaign to make his case.
This
article has been updated with latest results and reaction.
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