Weekend Herald

Erdogan sets opposition scrambling

- Suzan Fraser in Ankara

One party’s leader is in jail. Another doesn’t have a candidate. A third party’s leader might face eligibilit­y issues. Turkey’s weak opposition is scrambling to mount a meaningful challenge against strongman President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with just nine weeks to prepare for snap elections.

Erdogan set the presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections for June 24, in a move that will usher in a new system cementing the president’s grip on power more than a year ahead of schedule.

Turkey is switching from a parliament­ary system to an executive presidenti­al system after a narrowly approved referendum last year, after a failed 2016 coup attempt. The changes take effect with the next election, which had originally been set for November 2019.

The snap elections caught Turkey off guard and come as the opposition is in disarray. Recent changes to the electoral law pushed through by Erdogan’s governing AKP party with the help of the nationalis­t party make the playing field even more uneven for the opposition, analysts say.

Still, the opposition parties sounded upbeat with the main opposition party’s leader, Kemal Kilicdarog­lu, promising that the June elections would bring “democracy” and “calm”, and Meral Aksener, seen as the strongest candidate against Erdogan, vowing to send him home to rest after 15 years in power.

Observers say the early elections were called to capitalise on nationalis­t sentiment running high following a successful military campaign in Syria that ousted Syrian Kurdish militia from a border region, in a decision fuelled by fears of an economic downturn ahead.

“The fact that President Erdogan called early elections, which is the first time he had voluntaril­y done so since he assumed office . . . is an indication of panic and worry,” said Fadi Hakura, of the Chatham House thinktank.

The changes, which include ballot boxes being supervised by government-appointed civil servants and being relocated at will on security grounds, “make it improbable for the opposition to win any general election in Turkey”, Hakura said. “These really serious changes to the election law will, I think, make any serious challenge by the opposition highly improbable.”

The call for an early vote also follows the sale of Turkey’s largest media group, Dogan Holding, to a group close to Erdogan, further strengthen­ing his grip on the country’s media.

The main opposition party, the pro-secular Republican People’s Party has yet to announce its candidate. Its leader, Kilicdarog­lu, didn’t rule out an alliance with parties “that support democracy and oppose a one-man regime”. The party denied it has been caught by surprise, saying it has several strong candidates and will nominate one in the next two weeks.

But the person considered the most serious contender against Erdogan so far is Aksener, a popular former Interior Minister who defected from Turkey’s main nationalis­ts and formed her own party.

She has already announced her candidacy for the presidenti­al race. However, questions surround the eligibilit­y of her newly-founded Iyi (Good) Party for the parliament­ary vote, as the party is legally required to have completed its general congress six months before the elections — something made impossible by Erdogan calling the elections for June.

The party in the most precarious situation is the country’s pro-Kurdish party, whose 45-year-old popular and charismati­c former leader, Selahattin Demirtas, is in prison accused of links to outlawed Kurdish rebels. He faces a 142-year sentence on charges of leading a terror organisati­on, engaging in terror propaganda and other crimes.

AP

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Recep Tayyip Erdogan

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