Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Turkish president unifies — opposition

Alliance of parties aims to remove him from office

- By Umar Farooq Special to Los Angeles Times

ISTANBUL, Turkey — In the run-up to Turkey’s snap elections called for June 24, there is one thing the highly polarized electorate seems to agree on: The defining issue in the country is President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

Erdogan is the longestser­ving leader in Turkey’s modern history, and much of that success has depended on wooing a pious constituen­cy that makes up perhaps half of the nation’s 80 million people.

But his polarizing rhetoric, one that posits political opponents as an existentia­l threat to a conservati­ve way of life, may be backfiring.

A coalition of secular and religious leaders thinks he has gone too far and is uniting to defeat him at the ballot box.

The country has been under a state of emergency since July 2016, after a coup attempt by a military faction was thwarted by civilians.

Since then, more than 50,000 people have been jailed under charges of terrorism, in what critics say is a dragnet that encompasse­s not just those connected to the failed putsch, but also all of those opposing Erdogan.

“We are under extraordin­ary conditions, and sometimes extraordin­ary conditions make it obligatory for you to find extraordin­ary solutions,” said Ali Tirali, a member of the secular Republican People’s Party, or CHP, the second largest party in parliament. “Everyone in Turkey believes we need to unite against Erdogan.”

Four major opposition parties announced this month that they will form an alliance in the June 24 elections in an attempt to unseat Erdogan.

The coalition, dubbed the Democracy Alliance in the Turkish press, consists of the CHP, the Islamist Saadet Party, the right-wing Democratic Party and the center-right Iyi Party.

The alliance, which follows weeks of frantic meetings between opposition political leaders, would allow each party to be represente­d in parliament, bypassing a decades-old law that requires that a party receive at least 10 percent of votes to be granted a portion of the 600 seats in the legislatur­e. Although the alliance will work together for parliament­ary seats, each party is fielding its own presidenti­al candidate.

Whoever is elected president will inherit a new constituti­onal system that hands the office wide powers approved by voters in an April 2017 referendum. The office of prime minister will be eliminated, and the president will have powers to dissolve parliament and trigger new elections and appoint top judges.

Polls show Erdogan’s Justice and Developmen­t Party, or AKP, and its allied right-wing Nationalis­t Movement Party, or MHP, garnering about 50 percent of votes. It appears the opposition, if it can field a candidate that draws on the broad discontent with the government, could force the longtime leader into a runoff and possibly a secondroun­d defeat.

Such an outcome would be stunning for Erdogan, who has led the country, first as prime minister and then as president, for 15 years.

Two decades ago Erdogan and many Islamists in Turkey belonged to a single political party, the Welfare Party, led by former Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan, who ran on a nationalis­t ticket that espoused a pan-Islamist union instead of the pursuit of European Union membership.

But Erdogan, hoping to draw a broader voter base, formed the AKP in 2001 and called for economic and social reforms so Turkey could enter the EU.

The AKP, with its broad capitalist appeal, became an unmatched political force, opening trade with the West that brought economic prosperity to Turkey. The country’s GDP tripled under the party, which poured increased revenue into infrastruc­ture projects to modernize cities.

Erdogan has said that for Turkey to continue the economic gains it has made under the AKP, it must transition fully into the new presidenti­al system with a strong leader at the helm. Turkey will enter a “new era of greater prosperity, wealth and freedom … one where the executive is more effective,” he said.

In April, he announced that presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections originally scheduled for November 2019 would be held in June.

But in recent years conservati­ves have become worried about Erdogan’s authoritar­ian ways, Soner Cagaptay, author of “The New Sultan: Erdogan and the Crisis of Modern Turkey,” said in an interview.

“The AKP is no more about a political Islamist ideology, it’s about Erdogan personally, and whatever helps him get elected,” he said. “You could be a political Islamist, but if you don’t support him, you are considered an enemy of Erdogan.”

The polarizati­on in Turkey has meant that the conservati­ve Saadet Party has emerged as a kingmaker, making overtures to the secular CHP that have been met with applause by the half of the country seeking to unseat Erdogan.

Saadet’s head, Temel Karamollao­glu, a Britishedu­cated engineer, has spent the last few weeks working to draw Erdogan’s base away from the AKP.

Karamollao­glu has met not only with leaders from the secular CHP, but also with Kurdish leaders and the center-right Iyi Party, garnering widespread media coverage for a party that normally goes unnoticed.

He announced last week that he would run as Saadet’s candidate, offering a unifying message in sharp contrast to the polemics on which Erdogan campaigns.

“The issue in this country is not a matter of rightistle­ftist,” Karamollao­glu told supporters in Ankara, the capital. “The issue in this country is not a matter of conservati­ve or liberal either. The issue in this country is about the oppressors and the downtrodde­n.”

His outspoken criticism of Erdogan’s targeting of opponents under the state of emergency has struck a chord with the CHP, despite the party’s reputation as a secular stalwart. Traditiona­lly, the CHP, which champions a vision of Turkey where the state keeps strict checks on religion, has been at the opposite end of the spectrum from the Islamist Saadet Party.

Despite their ideologica­l difference­s, there is precedent for the CHP forming a government with an Islamist party. In 1974, the CHP and Erbakan, the leader Erdogan once followed, served in a coalition government.

 ?? PATRICK DOMINGO/GETTY-AFP ?? More than 50,000 people have been jailed under charges of terrorism, in what critics say is a dragnet to catch or at least quiet those opposing President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
PATRICK DOMINGO/GETTY-AFP More than 50,000 people have been jailed under charges of terrorism, in what critics say is a dragnet to catch or at least quiet those opposing President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

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