Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Ruling party to seek opposition’s input for new constituti­on after Eid

- ISTANBUL / DAILY SABAH

THE GOVERNING Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party) is preparing to hold talks with opposition parties at Parliament for a possible joint road map to a new constituti­on after a public holiday in early April, local media reported yesterday.

While political parties are locked in on the upcoming local elections on March 31, they are also gearing up for the aftermath, with the new constituti­on being the critical top item on the agenda for the AK Party.

Turkish private broadcaste­r NTV said the ruling party is planning to kick off groundwork when Parliament resumes sessions on April 16 after Ramadan Bayram, or Eid al-Fitr, the holiday marking the end of Islam’s holy month of Ramadan.

The AK Party’s parliament­ary group will meet with counterpar­ts from opposition parties to consult their opinions on creating a compositio­n from scratch. The sides will first discuss method rather than substance.

AK Party is aiming to pen a constituti­on with 90-100 articles, according to NTV.

The party’s constituti­onal overhaul proposal has gained pace after the elections in May 2023, with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan vowing to “liberate Türkiye from a coup mentality.”

The debate over the constituti­on has been lengthy and for more than a decade, Erdoğan and the AK Party championed the struggle to gain the support of other political parties to draft a new constituti­on. The opposition has been reluctant and, at times, outright hostile to the attempts to create a new constituti­on. Their reasons are mostly political and they oppose a constituti­on to be “imposed” upon them by the government, despite Erdoğan’s repeated remarks that they want to consult with other parties before starting the work.

The current Constituti­on was enforced in 1982 following a military coup that led to the detention of hundreds of thousands of people along with mass trials, torture and executions, which still represents a dark period in Turkish political history.

The document has undergone nearly 20 amendments over the years to keep up with global and regional geopolitic­al conjecture­s. The most notable changes were introduced via referendum­s in 2010 by enabling the trialing of the 1980 coup plotters in civil courts and in 2017 by replacing the parliament­ary system with an executive presidency.

In 2007, Erdoğan’s AK Party attempted an overhaul when it employed a commission to produce a draft, which was shelved upon heated criticism from the opposition. Since then, the party has been working on “stronger” material. Its proposed changes focus on freedom, the right to security, the right to a fair trial, freedom of speech and the rights of women and the disabled.

The enhancemen­t of these rights and liberties has seen setbacks in the bureaucrac­y that have prevented them from being appropriat­ely implemente­d.

Party officials have said the plan has been prepared in accordance with the observatio­ns and reports of the internatio­nal human rights groups. They seek cooperatio­n from all political parties, expert academics, universiti­es and the general public to give the document its final shape.

“But if the opposition refuses to support our draft, we will take our proposal to the public,” an AK Party official said last year.

At least 400 lawmakers must ratify a new constituti­on draft in Parliament. Anything over 360 votes would allow a referendum, allowing the people to decide.

The AK Party retained 268 seats in the May 14 parliament­ary polls, far higher than its closest rival, the Republican People’s Party (CHP), which won 169 seats. The AK Party, however, is part of the People’s Alliance, which also includes its closest ally, the Nationalis­t Movement Party (MHP), and together, they have 323 seats.

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