Turkey goes to polls in crucial elections

Turkey Election Bahceli
Turkey Election Bahceli

Gray Wolves, the supporters of Turkey‘s opposition Nationalist Action Party, MHP, cheer MHP leader Devlet Bahceli as he addresses an election rally in Istanbul, Turkey, Sunday, May 31, 2015.


Turks are expected go to the polls on Sunday in the closest parliamentary election in more than a decade, one that could pave the way for President Tayyip Erdogan to amass greater power or end 12 years of single-party rule for the AK Party he founded.

Turkey’s most popular yet most divisive politician, Erdogan seeks a large majority for the ruling AK Party to boost his powers.

He says a U.S.-style executive presidency is necessary to bolster the regional influence and economic advances of NATO-member Turkey.

“They say ‘If Erdogan gets what he wants on Sunday he will be unstoppable’,” he told a rally in the northeastern province of Ardahan on Saturday, according to Reuters news agency.

“They actually mean Turkey will be unstoppable.”

In power since 2002, the AKP is expected to again be the largest party by far.

But achieving a majority may depend on the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) falling below the 10 percent hurdle required to enter parliament. Opinion polls put it around that level.

Party politics

While constitutionally required to stay above party politics, Erdogan has held frequent rallies during what has been a confrontational election campaign, joining Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu in attacking opposition parties.

The two have portrayed the election as a choice between a “new Turkey” or a return to a history marked by short-lived coalition governments, economic instability and military coups.

“Either the stability of the last 12 years will continue, or there will be the crisis scenario of those who want to take Turkey back to the chaos and crisis atmosphere of the 1990s,” Davutoglu told a rally in the southern city of Antalya.

On Friday, a deadly bombing in the mainly Kurdish southeast has magnified attention on the pro-Kurdish opposition, which is trying to enter parliament as a party for the first time.

Efforts to end a three-decade Kurdish insurgency as well as Erdogan’s political ambitions could hinge on that party’s fate.

Erdogan late on Friday expressed his condolences for victims of the attack, calling it a “provocation”.

While he says he is equally distant from all parties, HDP leaders have accused Erdogan of whipping up sentiment against them and party deputy Idris Baluken said he and the AKP bore responsibility for Friday’s attack.

“The source of the violence is the AKP, the president. For two months, we have been warning that the rhetoric would result in just this, including in our talks with the government,” Baluken told Reuters.




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