Turkey’s opposition party sweeps to local
elections victory in snub to Erdoğan
Ekrem Imamoğlu secures unexpected second term as
Istanbul’s mayor, propelling the CHP to the centre of national politics
Ruth
Michaelson and Ayça Aldatmaz in Istanbul
Sun 31 Mar
2024 18.24 EDT
Turkey’s
main opposition party dealt an unexpected blow to Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s rule
on Sunday with a sweeping victory in Turkey’s local elections, maintaining
control of major cities including the capital, Ankara, and Istanbul, where
Ekrem Imamoğlu secured a second term as mayor.
“My dear
Istanbulites, you opened the door to a new future today,” Imamoğlu told
overjoyed supporters of his opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) while
declaring victory. “Starting from tomorrow, Turkey will be a different Turkey.
You opened the door to the rise of democracy, equality and freedom … You
ignited hope at the ballot box.”
Favourable
turnout continued benefit the opposition as the night wore on, and the CHP
secured control of a broad swath of western Turkey and scored wins across more
conservative regions next to the Black Sea and central Anatolia, areas
traditionally seen as hostile to its policies.
The results
quickly became symbolic of dissatisfaction with Erdoğan, who began rallying his
supporters to turn out in local elections immediately after winning the
presidency last year.
Erdoğan was
at the forefront of his party’s campaign to retake Istanbul, holding rallies in
the city in the week before the vote and attending prayers at the symbolic
Hagia Sophia mosque in Istanbul the night prior to the ballot.
“These
election results show that voters decided to establish a new politics in
Turkey,” said the head of the CHP, Özgür Özel, addressing the public with tears
in his eyes.
In a muted
speech to a subdued crowd outside his party’s headquarters in Ankara, Erdoğan
praised the vote itself rather than the outcome. “Regardless of the results,
the winner of this election is primarily democracy,” he said.
“Unfortunately,
we couldn’t get the result we wanted in local elections … Everything happens
for a reason. We will rebuild trust in places where our nation has chosen
someone else.”
Erdoğan
addressed most of his comments to the crowd, telling them at one point: “I am
madly in love with you.”
Imamoğlu,
the star of Turkey’s opposition, beat his rival, Murat Kurum, a former
bureaucrat and environment minister from Erdoğan’s Justice and Development
party (AKP), by a significant margin in Turkey’s largest city, where his
mayorship has become a thorn in the side of the Turkish president. With a
majority of votes counted, the Istanbul mayor was on course to beat Kurum by
10%.
Across
Istanbul, drivers honked car horns in celebration, while videos showed jubilant
people tearing down a poster featuring Kurum’s face.
Tens of
thousands of people lit torches and waved Turkish flags after partial local
election results showed that support for the government had weakened.
“Turkish
people have opened their eyes and voted for those candidates who think about
Turkey’s economy, the youth’s education and future,” university student Ege
Ersoz, 19, told AFP at the Sarachane square .
“This is
only the beginning. It’s the first time AKP lost this much. God willing, this
will go on in the coming elections,” he said, referring to Erdogan’s Justice
and Development Party.
Large
crowds chanted slogans, “Turkey is secular and will remain secular” and
“Tayyip, resign!”
“These
results will put Imamoğlu and the CHP at the centre of Turkish politics,” said
Yusuf Can, an analyst with the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
in Washington.
Erdoğan
demanded a rerun of Imamoğlu’s initial election victory in 2019, leading to a
resounding second win for the opposition mayor. The result vaulted him from a
minor municipal official to a role as the main challenger to Erdoğan’s rule.
His second resounding victory is expected to set Imamoğlu on the path to a
presidential run.
The mayor’s
campaign for a second term proved challenging. Election insiders estimated that
Erdoğan’s AKP outspent Imamoğlu and the CHP by a factor of three in Istanbul,
the country’s financial and cultural centre, where Erdoğan occupied the
position of mayor 30 years ago.
Despite
Erdoğan’s name not appearing on the ballot, voters across the country seized
the opportunity to express their dissatisfaction with his policies, many citing
Turkey’s struggling economy as their motivation for voting for the opposition
or a rising collection of smaller parties further to the right than the AKP.
“It’s a
resounding message,” said Selim Sazak, the head of Sanda Global, an
Ankara-based consultancy that advised several campaigns during the local
election cycle. “The voters are telling the government that the economy is
really hurting them.”
Their
message, he added, was that either Imamoğlu or Ankara’s mayor, Mansur Yavaș,
could have turned out a similar sweeping victory for the opposition if the CHP
had selected them as presidential candidates last year.
The AKP
selected the former environment minister Murat Kurum, born and raised in
Ankara, to challenge the charismatic Istanbul mayor for a seat that Erdoğan
held from 1994 to 1998, only furthering the impression that Erdoğan sought to
bring Istanbul back within the central government’s sphere of influence.
However,
some of Kurum’s recent jabs at İmamoğlu backfired, notably his decision to tell
the latter that he should “go and manage a meatball shop”, in reference to a
popular Turkish staple.
Imamoğlu
made plenty of use of Kurum’s comments on the campaign trail as evidence that
his challenger was out of touch with the average Istanbulite, telling a crowd
of supporters: “Do you know why I love this election? Both the meatball maker
and the minister are equal [at the ballot box].”
Erdoğan’s
efforts to place himself at the forefront of the fight to retake Istanbul also
backfired with many of its residents. Turkey has been plagued by an economic
crisis linked to his policies, one that has hit the populations of major cities
the hardest.
“That son
of a bitch raised inflation himself. That’s enough,” said one voter, Burhan,
who asked that his family name be withheld. He said he had previously voted for
the AKP but opted for Imamoğlu this time as he remained unhappy about the lack
of economic progress since Erdoğan’s victory last year.
After
winning re-election, Erdoğan appointed a new finance minister and central bank
governor, who introduced reforms and austerity measures that some observers
considered essential, but which left much of the public worse off as inflation
continued to rise.
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