Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Erdoğan vows higher welfare in campaign

With the high-stakes mayoral elections less than 10 days away, the president vowed to push welfare higher and ‘not leave Türkiye in the feuding opposition’s hands’

- ISTANBUL - DAILY SABAH

more than 70,000 people in Kayseri in the country’s Anatolian heartland yesterday, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan reiterated his pledge to address the country’s inflation woes while lambasting the opposition, “which will probably see another round of infighting after the March 31 municipal elections.”

Erdoğan has been campaignin­g ceaselessl­y for the upcoming local vote on behalf of his ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party), drawing in thousands across dozens of provinces since January and promising to bring back what he calls “true service municipali­sm” and save Türkiye from a “whirlpool of failures.”

“We are making every effort to further raise the welfare of our workers and pensioners by utilizing every means possible,” Erdoğan told Kayseri residents, who, with 68%, overwhelmi­ngly endorsed the president and his party in last May’s elections.

Pointing to a recent past when the Republican People’s Party (CHP) administra­tions failed to pay civil servants or pensioners, Erdoğan warned such a repeat of history was more than possible “if we leave the country in their hands.”

He stressed that the People’s Alliance, the AK Party-led election bloc with two other parties, was “the only political willpower that can accomplish this (developmen­t).”

“Just look at the state of the opposition,” he said, referring to internal disarray between the CHP and its former allies fueled by resentment over last year’s electoral defeat and bargaining over mayoral seats.

The CHP-led opposition alliance fell apart after losing presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections in May as the CHP’s closest ally, the nationalis­t Good Party (IP), blamed exChair Kemal Kılıçdaroğ­lu for the failure and promptly walked out. IP Chair Meral Akşener later rejected CHP Chair Özgür Özel’s offer to form another alliance and fielded its own candidates, taking significan­t voter support with it. Kılıçdaroğ­lu himself was ousted in a November 2023 vote from the CHP by Özel after refusing to resign for months on end. During his 13-year reign, the CHP failed to surpass a historic ceiling of 25% nationwide support, suffering eight election defeats in total.

“They have disappoint­ed our people who supported them numerous times,” Erdoğan said in Kayseri. “Millions of our people voted for the CHP with fresh hope, but they lost not only the elections but their hopes, as well.”

ADDRESSING more than 70,000 people in Kayseri in the country’s Anatolian heartland yesterday, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan reiterated his pledge to address the country’s inflation woes while lambasting the opposition, “which will probably see another round of infighting after the March 31 municipal elections.”

Erdoğan has been campaignin­g ceaselessl­y for the upcoming local vote on behalf of his ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party), drawing in thousands across dozens of provinces since January and promising to bring back what he calls “true service municipali­sm” and save Türkiye from a “whirlpool of failures.”

“We are making every effort to further raise the welfare of our workers and pensioners by utilizing every means possible,” Erdoğan told Kayseri residents, who, with 68%, overwhelmi­ngly endorsed the president and his party in last May’s elections.

Pointing to a recent past when the Republican People’s Party (CHP) administra­tions failed to pay civil servants or pensioners, Erdoğan warned such a repeat of history was more than possible “if we leave the country into their hands.”

He stressed that the People’s Alliance, the AK Party-led election bloc with two other parties, was “the only political willpower that can accomplish this (developmen­t).”

“Just look at the state of the opposition,” he said, referring to internal disarray between the CHP and its former allies fueled by resentment over last year’s electoral defeat and bargaining over mayoral seats.

The CHP-led opposition alliance fell apart after losing presidenti­al and legislativ­e elections in May as the CHP’s closest ally, the nationalis­t Good Party (IP), blamed ex-Chair Kemal Kılıçdaroğ­lu for the failure and promptly walked out. IP Chair Meral Akşener later rejected CHP Chair Özgür Özel’s offer to form another alliance and fielded its own candidates, taking significan­t voter support with it.

Kılıçdaroğ­lu himself was ousted in a November 2023 vote from the CHP by Özel after refusing to resign for months on end. During his 13-year reign, the CHP failed to surpass a historic ceiling of 25% nationwide support, suffering eight election defeats in total.

“They have disappoint­ed our people who supported them numerous times,” Erdoğan said in Kayseri. “Millions of our people voted for the CHP with fresh hopes, but they lost not only the elections but their hopes, as well.”

Erdoğan lamented that the CHP-run municipali­ties “deprived citizens of existing services for years, let alone bringing in new investment­s” and slammed the party as “a bunch of slackers who have no intention of developing themselves.”

The AK Party promises to build disaster-resistant neighborho­ods and prepare cities against climate change while implementi­ng infrastruc­ture compatible with digital technologi­es and projects to protect culture and bolster local administra­tions.

CASH SCANDAL

“They are also yet to produce an explanatio­n for that video of cash-counters,” Erdoğan went on, referring to a potential bribery scandal that rocked the CHP earlier last week.

Turkish prosecutor­s are probing a controvers­ial video showing three CHP officials counting piles of cash, allegedly TL 15 million ($470,000), at the party’s Istanbul branch, which critics claimed was used to “buy” delegates in favor of Özel against Kılıçdaroğ­lu during the November intraparty vote.

The CHP denied the allegation­s, saying the money was for the purchase of the branch’s new building in Istanbul in 2019, and the footage was from the camera of the office of a lawyer representi­ng the property owner. The party blamed the lawyer for leaking the footage and insisted that the said lawyer tried to blackmail the party, though the footage did not have any “criminal actions.”

İmamoğlu himself dismissed the claims that money was used for any nefarious purpose and said the video surfaced as an attempt by his adversarie­s looking to “bring him down before the election.”

Erdoğan criticized the party for “thinking they can cover up this scandal by attacking left and right instead of offering an honest explanatio­n.”

“They’re cozying up to certain people to win the election but even if that doesn’t look very bright for them,” Erdoğan added, referring to a “secret” alliance the CHP has with the Green Left Party (YSP), informally known as the Peoples’ Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party) and a successor of the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) broadly known for its ties to the PKK terrorist group.

Erdoğan argued the YSP’s mainly Kurdish voter base was “bothered” by the YSP “offering their willpower up to the CHP in exchange for unknown returns.”

“They cannot tolerate being subjected to insults, discrimina­tion or racism because the CHP executives because of their preference­s,” he said.

The CHP is also accused of clandestin­ely dividing up mayoral districts for

YSP candidates in metropolit­an Istanbul in exchange for the YSP’s indirect endorsemen­t of its incumbent mayor, Ekrem İmamoğlu, in upcoming polls, despite the YSP nominating its own mayoral candidate against İmamoğlu.

Erdoğan further criticized CHP mayors for “wasting their resources and boasting of not producing any projects, not building roads or tunnels or bridges,” while he said, “The biggest danger that awaits their cities is earthquake­s.”

“This mentality that is interested in nothing beyond its own ambitions is a major misfortune for our country,” Erdoğan said.

Alluding to increasing calls for another overhaul at the CHP over the power struggle between Özel and İmamoğlu, Erdoğan also argued a “new round of infighting awaits the opposition after March 31.”

TACKLING INFLATION

Turning to economic troubles in Türkiye, Erdoğan said the country was facing its “biggest battle against inflation and the mentality stoking high cost of living.”

After winning reelection last May, Erdoğan installed a new economy administra­tion that delivered aggressive tightening and unveiled a medium-term program aimed at arresting inflation, curbing chronic deficits, rebuilding foreign exchange reserves and stabilizin­g the Turkish lira.

He reaffirmed his administra­tion’s commitment to protecting workers, small businesses and pensioners against inflation, which rose to over 67% in February and is envisaged to peak by the middle of the year before entering what officials say would be a steep downward trend. The central bank sees year-end inflation at as low as 36%.

“We are determined to see this struggle to success, and we will do so without false numbers or fooling anyone but working, producing and increasing the cake,” Erdoğan said, assuring that inflation would see a “sharp decline” starting in the second half of the year.

“As the burden of inflation and resources reserved for earthquake (rehabilita­tion) on budget eases, we will push our welfare levels even higher,” he said.

Certain bans for the March 31 elections came into effect yesterday. Broadcasti­ng or publishing polls, surveys, prediction­s, and mini referendum­s to influence voters will be prohibited. The propaganda period ends on Saturday, March 30, for all competing parties, the Supreme Election Council (YSK) said Wednesday.

Erdoğan is expected to complete his campaign tour with two massive rallies this weekend, in Ankara on Saturday and in Istanbul on Sunday.

 ?? ?? President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan waves at the crowd during a rally in central Kayseri province, Türkiye, March 21, 2024.
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan waves at the crowd during a rally in central Kayseri province, Türkiye, March 21, 2024.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye