Turkey to decide on Erdogan today
59m Turkish citizens are eligible to vote 600 Parliamentary seats are up for grabs
istanbul — Turkey was awash in campaign promises on Saturday as politicians pressed to get voters’ attention in the last remaining hours before a ban begins ahead of Sunday’s critical presidential and parliamentary elections.
Speaking in Istanbul, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged citizens to vote and listed the hospitals and transportation infrastructure as proof of his leadership. He also slammed his opponents for reportedly lacking vision.
“The presidency requires experience,” said the man who has led Turkey since 2003 as prime minister and since 2014 as the country’s first directly elected president.
The 64-year-old Erdogan called the elections more than a year ahead of schedule in a bid to usher in an executive presidency with sweeping powers. He said the new system will bring stability and prosperity to Turkey, but critics warn it could lead to a “one-man rule” amid signs of an unsound economy.
Despite the short campaign season, the uneven media coverage and government resources that favor Erdogan, his competitors for the presidency and in parliament have launched a serious bid to unseat him.
More than 59 million Turkish citizens, including some 3 million living abroad, are eligible to vote on Sunday. It’s the first time they’ll be voting for president and parliament at the same time — a change approved last year by a referendum that switched Turkey’s governance system to an executive presidency.
Six candidates are running for president and eight parties have fielded candidates for 600 parliamentary seats. Five of those parties will also run as part of two competing electoral alliances: The “People Alliance” by Erdogan’s ruling party and a nationalist party versus the “Nation Alliance” by the leading secular opposition, a nascent centre-right party and an Islamicleaning party. Erdogan’s main opponent, Muharrem Ince, nominated by the secular Republican People’s Party, drew hundreds of thousands of supporters to a rally on Saturday in Istanbul. Confident and combative, Ince said “Erdogan you are going!” and called him a “fascist.”
Ince promised voters an independent judiciary that he said would stabilise the economy. He warned supporters that a “fear regime” would continue if Erdogan is re-elected, predicting that financial markets would be rattled and the national lira currency would decline further. But halfway through Ince’s rally, mainstream Turkish media switched over to a second Erdogan speech as he crisscrossed Istanbul, appearing in several districts. He declared that Turkey was now one of the world’s leading economies, citing more than 7 per cent growth for the first quarter of 2018. ProKurdish candidate Selahattin Demirtas tweeted his hopes for a calm election day, urging young people to vote. He is running for president from a maximum security prison. —