Middle-east Arab News Opinion | Asharq Al-awsat

Erdoğan, eyeing greater powers, says Turks voted for stability | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
Select Page
Media ID: 55345528
Caption:

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (C) escorted by his bodyguards waves to his supporters after he casts his vote outside a polling station, in Istanbul, on November 1, 2015. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)


Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (C) escorted by his bodyguards waves to his supporters after he casts his vote outside a polling station, in Istanbul, on November 1, 2015. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (C) escorted by his bodyguards waves to his supporters after he casts his vote outside a polling station, in Istanbul, on November 1, 2015. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Ankara, Reuters—A jubilant President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Monday cast the return of Turkey’s Islamist-rooted Justice and Development Party (AKP) to single-party rule as a vote for stability that the world must respect, but opponents fear it heralds growing authoritarianism and deeper polarization.

The AKP defied pollsters and even the expectations of its own strategists in a general election on Sunday, consolidating support from the right to claw back a parliamentary majority that will bolster Erdoğan’s grip on power.

It was a personal triumph for the combative leader, who despite being constitutionally above party politics as head of state had shaped the AKP’s executive committee and its parliamentary candidates in the run-up to the vote.

The result handed the AKP 317 of the 550 seats in parliament, only 13 short of the number Erdoğan would need for a national referendum on constitutional changes he wants to forge a presidential system granting him full executive powers.

“The national will manifested itself on November 1 in favor of stability,” Erdoğan said in comments to reporters after praying at a mosque in Istanbul.

“Let’s be as one, be brothers and all be Turkey together.”

The vote came at a critical time for Turkey on the global stage, with the United States dependent on Turkish air bases in the fight against the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) in Syria, and the European Union desperate for Turkish help with its growing migration crisis.

Erdoğan’s victory, two weeks ahead of a G20 leaders’ summit in the Mediterranean city of Antalya, leaves Western allies dealing with an emboldened leader they may already know, but whose cooperation has not always been easy to secure.

Financial markets rallied on the outcome, with the lira currency on track for its biggest one-day gain in seven years and stocks up 5 percent, relieved that uncertainty from an election cycle stretching back almost two years had finally ended.

But the result left the 50 percent of Turks who did not vote AKP in shock: from liberal secularists suspicious of Erdoğan’s Islamist ideals to left-leaning Kurds who blame the government for resurgent violence in the largely Kurdish southeast.

Since nationwide anti-government protests and a corruption scandal around Erdoğan’s inner circle in 2013, his opponents had lived in the hope that the power of modern Turkey’s most divisive leader was finally on the wane.

“Back to Square One” said the headline on Today’s Zaman, a newspaper critical of the AKP, casting the outcome as a result of a divisive and fiercely nationalist campaign.

Green light for greater power

Erdoğan won Turkey’s first popular presidential election in August 2014 after more than a decade as prime minister and immediately vowed to use his mandate to strengthen what had been a largely ceremonial post appointed by parliament.

Even without constitutional change, he wasted little time flexing his political muscle, hosting cabinet meetings in his new 1,000-room Ankara palace and surrounding himself with powerful advisers in what effectively became a “shadow cabinet.”

His opponents hoped that the loss of the AKP’s majority in a June 7 election, raising the prospect of coalition government, would put a stop to such overreach of his powers. But Sunday’s result has put his ambitions firmly back on track.

“The view that the June 7 elections were a ‘no’ to the executive presidency has been collapsed,” said Mustafa Şentop, a senior AKP official who previously spearheaded the party’s efforts at constitutional reform.

“The numbers are not enough at the moment, but I think these elections show a desire for the presidential system to be instilled. It could be seen as a green or yellow light for the presidency,” he told Reuters.

It remained to be seen whether the additional 13 parliamentary votes needed to support a referendum could be found, but it was an ambition on which the AKP would “definitely not give up,” he said.

In the meantime, a source in the presidency said, the cabinet would continue to meet in the palace “from time to time” suggesting no letup in Erdoğan’s influence on daily affairs.

Erdoğan has consistently portrayed criticism of his leadership as part of a foreign-backed effort to belittle him and undermine Turkey’s influence in the region.

“Now a party with some 50 percent in Turkey has attained power . . . This should be respected by the whole world, but I have not seen such maturity,” he said on Monday, criticizing global media coverage of the election.

Deeper polarization

The rise in AKP support on Sunday appeared to have been motivated by renewed fighting between the security forces and Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) militants in the predominantly Kurdish southeast since a ceasefire collapsed in July.

Right-wing voters supportive of the renewed military campaign abandoned the nationalist Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), while conservative Kurds and liberal Turks who blame the PKK for the unrest turned their back on the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP).

"The recent sense of instability in Turkey, coupled with Erdoğan's "strong man who can protect you" strategy seems to have worked. This is a victory for both Erdoğan and for the PKK," said Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish Research Program at The Washington Institute.

"Erdoğan has managed to consolidate much of the political right," he said in an email.

But in doing so he has also further alienated opponents.

The HDP, which is set to control 59 seats in parliament, accused Erdoğan on Sunday of a deliberate strategy of polarization to stir up nationalist support. Erdoğan meanwhile said the election outcome was a message to the PKK and its allies that violence could not coexist with democracy.

Analysts are divided on whether an emboldened Erdoğan will now seek to push an even harder military strategy in the southeast, or whether he will return to a peace process with the PKK he initiated two and a half years ago.

"It must continue, but with a new understanding," said one senior AKP official familiar with the peace process, adding that, in line with Erdoğan's majoritarian view of democracy, the HDP's role as mediator would from now on be limited.

"That role is finished. The most they can be is one of the actors."