Daily Sabah (Turkey)

AK Party goes green for election campaign, calls on other parties to follow its lead

In the AK Party’s provincial heads meeting, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan announced 14 more candidates for the upcoming local elections, calling on all parties to use more technology-based and less pollution-causing campaigns

- ÖZGENUR SEVİNÇ - ANKARA

STREETS decorated with colorful flags of all the political parties, posters of candidates on walls and posts, minivans driving around with loudspeake­rs playing campaign songs. This chaotic picture, which was described as visual pollution by many, would be on display during previous election periods in the streets of Turkey. However yesterday the ruling Justice and Developmen­t Party (AK Party) announced that for the March 2019 municipal elections these traditiona­l methods will be eliminated and instead be made more environmen­tally friendly through the utilizatio­n of social media channels. “We are completely leaving campaign methods that cause visual and noise pollution. We have decided to follow a campaign respecting the environmen­t and people,” President and Chairman of the AK Party Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said yesterday during the party’s extended provincial heads meeting at party headquarte­rs in Ankara. Erdoğan underlined that in order to prevent visual pollution, the party will only be allowed to display flags in the regions of party organizati­ons and election coordinati­on centers. The AK Party election buses will not be touring except on specific times set beforehand. Erdoğan underscore­d that social media and other mediums will take the place of traditiona­l campaign methods.

AS a party known for its green policies, it is not hard to understand why the AK Party opts for holding a more modern and technologi­cal election campaign.

In the main squares of the cities, it is possible to see political parties setting up stands next to each other displaying party banners and distributi­ng brochures. The party buses of different parties parked there also loudly play campaign songs that merge with the all the other songs playing.

“There has been increasing disturbanc­e in all parts of society during the election campaigns which often turn into a demonstrat­ion of political power. Hanging banners and playing campaign songs from buses belong in the 1990s; responding to the demands of the people AK Party took the initiative as the ruling party to end this,” said İsmail Çağlar, the society and media research director at the Foundation for Political, Economic and Social Research (SETA).

Erdoğan also called on other political parties to give up old campaignin­g tools harming the environmen­t and adopt new methods.

Stressing the increasing use of the internet in Turkey and across the world, Erdoğan said that it is possible to reach out to more people via social media rather than holding meetings in cities.

Currently, 4 billion people use the internet globally and 3 billion of them are social media users. In Turkey, the numbers are also high; there are 54.5 million internet users and 51 million social media users.

Erdoğan himself is an active user of social media as he has over 13 million followers on Twitter.

Çağlar underscore­d that it is no surprise that the AK Party decided to hold an elec- tion campaign via social media as Erdoğan has been long stressing the significan­ce of rejuvenati­on and reforms. Çağlar further stated that “in the previous elections AK Party had already prioritize­d using social media as part of its election campaigns.”

In the past presidenti­al election, Erdoğan actively used his Twitter account for election campaignin­g.

According to a report by SETA about the presidenti­al candidates’ social media strategy in the June 24 elections, Erdoğan prioritize­d his election promises in his social media during the June 24 presidenti­al election campaign and defined his promises as the continuanc­e of the current performanc­e.

Referring to the June 24 presidenti­al campaign period, the report said “It is seen that 11.17 percent of Erdoğan’s tweets were about his promises and 10.64 were about current activities,” and added “[Some] 45.7 percent of the content of Erdoğan’s tweets are related to meetings and events.”

Since it came to power in 2002, the AK Party has been known for its green policies aiming at increasing environmen­tal sensitivit­y. According to a report by the AK Party that explains the activities and performanc­e of the government in the past decade, between 1992 and 2002, the government oversaw afforestat­ion work in some 743,000-hectare area. This number has increased six-fold between 2003 and 2017. During the last decade of the AK Partyled government, a 4.9 million hectare area was used for forestatio­n. The same report revealed that some 1.5 million hectares of new forests were also created in Turkey.

AK PARTY ANNOUNCES 14 MORE CANDIDATES FOR MAYORSHIP

Erdoğan also announced yesterday the names of 14 more candidates for mayorships in the local elections, including the provinces of Aksaray, Ağrı, Bilecik, Erzincan, Edirne, Iğdır, Isparta, Kars, Kırşehir, Kütahya, Siirt, Tunceli, Van and Zonguldak.

With the 60 mayoral candidates Erdoğan announced previously, including candidates for Ankara, Izmir and 12 more metropolit­an municipali­ties, the ruling AK Party has announced 74 provincial mayoral candidates to date.

Previously, the Nationalis­t Movement Party (MHP) announced that it will not nominate candidates in İstanbul, Ankara, and İzmir and instead support the candidates of the AK Party. Former Environmen­t and Urban Planning Minister Mehmet Özhaseki, who now serves as deputy from central Kayseri province and AK Party vice chairman in charge of local administra­tions, was nominated for the capital Ankara.

The AK Party’s candidate for western Izmir province, which is a stronghold of the CHP, is former Economy Minister and Denizli deputy Nihat Zeybekci, who held the ministry post from December 2013 to November 2015 and from May 2016 to July 2018.

There are seven provinces including İstanbul that the AK Party has yet to announce. The remaining cities are Manisa, Aydın, Muğla, Mersin and Adana. In İstanbul, Parliament Speaker and former Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım is largely expected to be the candidate of the AK Party. Except İstanbul, all other provinces are reportedly being considered for joint candidacy with the MHP as part of their People’s Alliance. The MHP won the 2014 local elections in Adana, Mersin, Manisa and Osmaniye provinces.

The names announced so far point to a large-scale renewal by the AK Party on a local scale with the party sticking to its threeterm limit. Out of the 74 names announced so far, only 17 are incumbent mayors, and among those names are several mayors who took over during the AK Party’s rejuvenati­on bid in late 2017 and others who replaced outgoing mayors elected to Parliament in the June 2018 presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections.

AK PARTY UPHOLDS PEOPLE’S ALLIANCE WITH MHP

In relation to the People’s Alliance formed with the MHP, Erdoğan stressed that the AK Party aims to continue the alliance in harmony.

“No one should attempt to cast a shadow into our People’s Alliance,” Erdoğan said calling on members of the AK Party to continue efforts without taking steps that would undermine the alliance. He underscore­d that everyone needs to follow the decisions taken by the parties’ headquarte­rs in order to reach harmony.

The People’s Alliance between the MHP and the AK Party was formed ahead of the June 24 parliament­ary and presidenti­al elections. The alliance received a majority in Parliament, while their presidenti­al candidate, the incumbent president, also won the election by 52.6 percent of the votes. As both parties consider the results of the June 24 elections as successful, they now seek to continue their alliance in the local elections.

 ??  ?? The AK Party will not use traditiona­l methods of campaignin­g in city centers, such as large banners and party flags, in a bid to reduce visual pollution in the upcoming municipal elections.
The AK Party will not use traditiona­l methods of campaignin­g in city centers, such as large banners and party flags, in a bid to reduce visual pollution in the upcoming municipal elections.
 ??  ?? President and Chairman of the AK Party Recep Tayyip Erdoğan gives a speech during the party's extended provincial heads meeting at party headquarte­rs, in Ankara, yesterday.
President and Chairman of the AK Party Recep Tayyip Erdoğan gives a speech during the party's extended provincial heads meeting at party headquarte­rs, in Ankara, yesterday.

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