The Jerusalem Post

Turkey’s Erdogan triumphs in election test

Rival says it was ‘most unfair election in years’ • Lira slips to record low against dollar

- • By DAREN BUTLER and EZGI ERKOYUN

ISTANBUL (Reuters) – President Tayyip Erdogan and supporters on Monday reveled in an election victory that lengthens his rule into a third decade. Turkey’s opposition, which once counted on winning, braced for “difficult days” against an increasing­ly autocratic government.

His rival Kemal Kilicdarog­lu said it was “the most unfair election in years,” but he did not dispute the outcome, which gave Erdogan a mandate to pursue policies that have polarized Turkey and strengthen­ed its position as a regional military power.

The election had been seen as Erdogan’s biggest political challenge. The opposition was confident of unseating him and reversing his policies, after polls showed a cost-of-living crisis left him vulnerable.

But he prevailed with 52.2% of the vote to Kilicdarog­lu’s 47.8%. It reinforced Erdogan’s image of invincibil­ity in the deeply divided NATO-member country, whose foreign, economic and security policy he has redrawn.

Pro-government newspapers, part of an overwhelmi­ngly pro-Erdogan media landscape that buoyed his election campaign in the nation of 85 million people, cheered his victory.

“It’s a good result because Tayyip Erdogan is a good leader,” said Altay Sahin, a constructi­on worker in Istanbul. “He knows what the people want. If people have been voting for him for 20 years, he must be a successful leader.”

Addressing supporters in a victory speech, Erdogan declared democracy the winner.

“Now is the time to put the disputes and conflicts of the election period to one side and unite around our national goals,” he said.

But the prospect of five more years of Erdogan rule was a harsh blow to an opposition that accused him of underminin­g democracy as he amassed ever more power – a charge he denies. Kilicdarog­lu had promised a new “spring” if he had won.

“I look at the people around me, who were supporting the opposition, and all of them are resentful,” said Hulya Yildirim, a lawyer. “We forgot about spring in this country. We have to make our own spring because the people seem to be happy with winter.”

The lira slipped to a record low of 20.08 against the dollar. It has lost 90% of its value over the past decade, buffeted by a currency crisis and rampant inflation.

Its most recent losses were driven by uncertaint­y about what an Erdogan win would mean for economic policy. Critics have blamed his unorthodox, low-interest-rate economic blueprint, which the opposition had pledged to reverse, for the currency’s woes.

Erdogan said inflation, which hit a 24-year peak of 85% last year, before easing, is Turkey’s most urgent issue.

‘DIFFICULT DAYS’

Though he called for unity, Erdogan stuck to a major theme of his campaign, accusing Kilicdarog­lu

and the opposition of siding with terrorists, without providing evidence.

Turkey’s main pro-Kurdish party, parliament’s third largest, was among the opposition parties opposed to Erdogan and is accused of links to Kurdish militants, which it denies.

“For the opposition, very difficult days are ahead,” said Atilla Yesilada, an analyst at GlobalSour­ce Partners, forecastin­g more judicial moves against the Kurdish party and saying it was not clear whether the opposition alliance would remain intact.

Kilicdarog­lu’s defeat will probably be a cause for concern among Turkey’s NATO allies that have been alarmed by Erdogan’s amicable relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin, who congratula­ted his “dear friend” on his victory.

US President Joe Biden wrote on Twitter: “I look forward to continuing to work together as NATO allies on bilateral issues and shared global challenges.” He and Erdogan were to speak by phone later on Monday, Erdogan’s office said.

US relations with Turkey have been impeded by Erdogan’s objection to Sweden joining NATO, Ankara’s close relationsh­ip with Moscow, even as Russian forces wage a 15-monthold invasion of Ukraine, and difference­s over Syria.

ECONOMIC WOES

Erdogan’s victory extends his tenure as the longest-serving leader since Mustafa Kemal Ataturk establishe­d modern Turkey after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire a century ago – a politicall­y potent anniversar­y to be marked in October.

Erdogan, head of the Islamist-rooted AK Party, appealed to voters with nationalis­t and conservati­ve rhetoric in a divisive campaign that deflected attention from Turkey’s economic problems.

Kilicdarog­lu, who had promise to set Turkey on a more democratic and collaborat­ive path, said the election outcome showed there was a will among many Turks to remove an authoritar­ian government, but “all the means of the state were laid at the feet of one man.”

Erdogan’s performanc­e wrong-footed opponents who thought voters would punish him over the state’s initially slow response to earthquake­s in February, in which more than 50,000 people died.

But in the first round of voting on May 14, which included parliament­ary elections, his AK Party emerged at the top in 10 of the 11 provinces hit by the earthquake­s, helping it to secure a parliament­ary majority along with its allies.

 ?? (Hannah McKay/Reuters) ?? A VIEW OF newspapers featuring images of Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, after he was declared the winner in the second round of the presidenti­al election, in Istanbul, yesterday.
(Hannah McKay/Reuters) A VIEW OF newspapers featuring images of Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, after he was declared the winner in the second round of the presidenti­al election, in Istanbul, yesterday.

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