Kuwait Times

Erdogan’s obsession is winning Istanbul in Turkey election

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Recapturin­g Istanbul, the “jewel” of Turkey, in Sunday’s local elections has become President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s obsession ever since losing the country’s economic capital to the opposition in 2019. Erdogan’s route to Turkey’s presidency was launched in Istanbul, where he was elected mayor in 1994, and his allies held the city until Ekrem Imamoglu of the secular Republican People’s Party (CHP) wrested control five years ago. As soon as he clinched re-election as president last May, Erdogan launched the campaign to reclaim the city of 16 million people.

‘The jewel, the treasure’

“Are we ready to win back Istanbul?” he asked an enthusiast­ic crowd while perched on a bus in front of his residence. With two days to go before the vote, avenging the loss of Istanbul appears to be the most important issue for Erdogan’s party. “Istanbul is the jewel, the treasure and the apple of our country’s eye,” he said at a rally in the city a week before the elections.

Erman Bakirci, a pollster from Konda Research and Consultanc­y, summarized the importance of the city with the saying that “winter doesn’t come to Turkey until it snows in Istanbul”. Bakirci also recalled Erdogan once saying: “Whoever wins Istanbul, wins Turkey.”

The Turkish president named former environmen­t minister Murat Kurum as his mayoral candidate, entrusting him to reconquer Istanbul and consolidat­e his power. According to the latest polls, however, Imamoglu has a slight lead.

Resentment

Imamoglu edged out an Erdogan ally in the 2019 election that gained internatio­nal headlines for being controvers­ially annulled. He won the re-run vote by an even greater margin, turning him into an instant hero for the opposition and a formidable foe for Erdogan.

Without ever saying his name, Erdogan, who is omnipresen­t on Turkey’s television screens, regularly launches jabs at the mayor. Erdogan calls him a “part-time mayor” consumed by his presidenti­al ambitions.

Many observers say Imamoglu’s re-election on Sunday could bolster his standing ahead of the next presidenti­al elections in 2028, when he is widely expected to run. Berk Esen, an associate professor at Sabanci University in Istanbul, told AFP that Imamoglu “can meet thousands of voters on a daily basis” while on the campaign trail and put himself “in the headlines”. By winning Istanbul, he said, “Erdogan really hopes to end that”. — AFP

 ?? ?? ISTANBUL: A ferry passes election posters depicting Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and his party’s candidate for Istanbul mayor, Murat Kurum. — AFP
ISTANBUL: A ferry passes election posters depicting Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and his party’s candidate for Istanbul mayor, Murat Kurum. — AFP

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