Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Ex-opposition leader plots post-election comeback

- EDITOR YUSUF ZİYA DURMUŞ ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH

FORMER leader of Türkiye’s main opposition’s increasing­ly fractious Republican People’s Party (CHP) is allegedly plotting a comeback with the support of over half a thousand delegates following the local elections on March 31, according to local news website Haber Global.

Kemal Kılıçdaroğ­lu, ousted by Özgür Özel and his main backer Istanbul mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu in November for losing another presidenti­al vote, has secured the signatures of some 550 delegates for an early party congress, Haber Global wrote, citing sources close to the party.

Kılıçdaroğ­lu’s send-off had been fueled by an outcry of change at the CHP after the 75-year-old squandered what many viewed as the opposition’s best chance to end President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s two-decade rule. During his 13-year reign, the CHP failed to surpass a historic ceiling of 25% nationwide support, suffering eight election defeats in total. Many also complained the CHP had become undemocrat­ic, with too much power in the leader’s hands, while run by Kılıçdaroğ­lu, who also riled both members and supporters when he refused to concede defeat and resigned for many months following May polls.

With İmamoğlu at his side, Özel rode the partywide frustratio­n to victory with promises to overhaul failing policies and return to the founding values of the staunchly secular party. However, he has since been embattled by crises and scandals.

In addition to following in his predecesso­r’s footsteps by courting a party known for its links to the PKK terrorist group to boost CHP votes, Özel faces flak for what his dissidents claim is a power struggle against İmamoğlu.

The Istanbul mayor, who gave the CHP a much-needed victory in municipal elections by winning the longstandi­ng Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party) stronghold in the 2019 elections, is viewed as the “secret” chair of the party. He made the headlines before Özel’s elections when the records of a meeting he held with other CHP figures for mounting a campaign against Kılıçdaroğ­lu leaked to the media.

Critics say that although he does not have an administra­tive role in the party, İmamoğlu had a hand in picking candidates for upcoming municipal elections.

According to Haber Global, Kılıçdaroğ­lu, lamenting to his close circle a “disarray” at the CHP, has been quietly working out of his office in Ankara since leaving to win his seat back by gaining over mayors and council

members whom Özel and İmamoğlu discarded as candidates for the upcoming elections despite promising otherwise.

He didn’t wait until the elections were completed and persuaded 550 delegates to push for a snap congress. But the party needs at least half – 683 to be exact – of its 1,366

delegates to vote “yes” to hold that congress, where the party chair and council are elected.

Kılıçdaroğ­lu initially wanted to nominate himself at the said congress, but his supporters convinced him to adopt a “transition period” first. Accordingl­y, he is considerin­g nominating the CHP’s Elazığ Representa­tive,

Gürsel Erol, for CHP leadership. Erol had strongly backed Kılıçdaroğ­lu and harshly criticized Özel at CHP’s November congress, after which he lost his seat at the party council, the executive body of the CHP.

According to other Turkish media outlets, Kılıçdaroğ­lu’s backers plan to push for an extraordin­ary congress if Özel’s mayoral candidates fail to win or keep the major constituen­cies, namely Istanbul and the capital Ankara, in the March 31 elections.

Özel, in the meantime, is reportedly “aware” of the ongoing plot and could discharge key Kılıçdaroğ­lu supporters after the election.

The incumbent CHP chairperso­n himself has been criticized for failing to take a united stance against PKK terrorism by refusing to sign a joint declaratio­n with other parties following the killing of 12 soldiers by PKK in northern Iraq and openly courting the pro-PKK Green Left Party’s (YSP) informal endorsemen­t of CHP candidates, especially İmamoğlu.

His other decisions regarding candidate selection also stoked tensions, such as nominating his personal lawyer, Hüseyin Can Güner, for the mayoral seat of a high-profile Ankara district.

 ?? ?? The Republican People’s Party’s (CHP) then-chairperso­n Kemal Kılıçdaroğ­lu (R) and Özgür Özel attend an event, in the capital Ankara, Türkiye, June 2, 2023.
The Republican People’s Party’s (CHP) then-chairperso­n Kemal Kılıçdaroğ­lu (R) and Özgür Özel attend an event, in the capital Ankara, Türkiye, June 2, 2023.

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