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Turkey Election: A Real Challenge To Erdogan’s Rule

by Brad Pearce via RPI/The Wayward Rabbler

The first round of the Turkish Presidential elections is on Sunday, May 14th, Erdogan having chosen to call early elections instead of holding them during the general election in June. The main candidates are Turkey’s long-time leader President Recep Erdogan of the Justice and Development Party [AKP] and Kemal Kilicdaroglu of the Republican People’s Party [CHP] who is representing a coalition of six opposition groups known as the “Nation Alliance” or “Table of Six.” Neither candidate is expected to win over 50% in the first round, and the May 28th runoff is in a dead heat.

In 2017 there was a referendum on constitutional reform within Turkiye which greatly expanded the power of the Presidency, and this is Erdogan’s first re-election campaign after serving in the newly empowered position. The opposition wants to give power back to the parliament and return to a more pluralistic government and society in ways such as increasing media freedom and judicial independence. Further, Erdogan is proudly Islamist and Eastern, while Kilicdaroglu is a secularist who wants to Westernize the country and restart the process of trying to join the EU.

However, what has become most important to the Turks is the economy, where runaway inflation is causing daily price increases in staple goods such as onions, which are a major part of Turkish cuisine. Erdogan has pursued a policy of low-interest rates [though on paper they remain much higher than the US or Europe, but they are lower than inflation, so in practice, there are below zero interest rates.] His economic policies are widely described as “unorthodox,” whereas Kilicdaroglu, an accountant by trade would return the country to more “conventional” economic policies. Further, Erdogan’s response to a severe earthquake in early February has been widely criticized, both for the slow response speed and for the Erdogan administration has lax building code compliance to stimulate economic growth.

Perhaps most important for the world at large, Kilicdaroglu intends to pursue a less aggressive foreign policy and improve relations with Turkiye’s NATO allies, which have severely deteriorated over the last few years. At the same time, Turkey’s economic reliance on Russia and China and key foreign policy interests guarantee that either candidate will pursue some policies out of line with the West.

The international media is firmly in the tank for Kilicdaroglu, and promoting a strange sort of rhetoric that the election is unfair but the counting will be honest, seemingly in preparation for saying Kilicdaroglu rightly should have won the election whether or not he does. This is the most contentious election fight of Erdogan’s career and he is pulling out all the stops, presenting a cool military commander sort of persona, making wild claims about the opposition, and offering free Black Sea gas to homes, ostensibly in celebration of the project coming on line.

As the modern nation of Turkiye passes 100, it is caught between the liberal secular “Kemalism” of its founder Ataturk and a sort of Islamic populism championed by Erdogan. Many, myself included, consider the Turkish elections the most important of 2023, and the results will impact international relations in the region and world for years to come.

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Zero Hedge
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