Los Angeles Times

Turkey moves up elections

President Erdogan calls a June vote, speeding up expansion of his powers.

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ANKARA, Turkey — Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday called early elections for June, meaning that a new political system that would enable him to consolidat­e powers would take effect a year earlier than scheduled.

After a meeting with Devlet Bahceli, the leader of Turkey’s main nationalis­t party, Erdogan announced that the presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections originally scheduled for November 2019 will be held June 24 of this year.

He said the new system needs to be implemente­d quickly in order to deal with numerous challenges ahead, including the fight against Kurdish insurgents in Syria and Iraq.

Turkey is switching from a parliament­ary system to a presidenti­al system that abolishes the office of the prime minister and decreases the powers of the parliament, after a narrowly approved referendum last year. The changes, which critics say will further reduce checks and balances, will take effect with the next elections.

“Be it the cross-border operations in Syria or incidents of historic importance centered in Syria and Iraq, they have made it imperative for Turkey to overcome uncertaint­ies quickly,” Erdogan said in apparent reference to the aspiration­s for independen­ce by Kurds in the countries.

“Switching to a new system of government has increasing­ly gained urgency so that decisions regarding our country’s future can be made and implemente­d with greater strength.”

The snap elections were called a day after Bahceli, the leader of the Nationalis­t Movement Party and an Erdogan ally, made a surprise call for an early election in the summer.

Bahceli contended there’s “no point in prolonging this any longer,” citing efforts by unnamed groups to foment chaos in Turkey.

Erdogan, who has moved to further tighten his grip on power since a failed coup attempt in 2016, needs a 51% majority to be reelected in the first round of the presidenti­al election. This year, his ruling conservati­ve, Islamic-rooted Justice and Developmen­t Party formed an election alliance with Bahceli’s party.

Nationalis­t sentiment is running high over Turkey’s recent military operation in Syria, which ousted Syrian Kurdish forces from a northern enclave. Ankara has labeled the Syrian Kurdish fighters as terrorists because of their affiliatio­n with outlawed Kurdish rebels fighting in Turkey.

Although caught off guard, opposition parties said they were ready for the early election.

Last month, the Justice and Developmen­t Party, with the help of the Nationalis­t Movement Party, passed a set of changes to the country’s electoral laws that critics said are aimed at helping Erdogan consolidat­e power and could lead to election fraud.

In a related developmen­t, parliament voted on Wednesday to prolong a state of emergency that was declared after the failed coup.

The state of emergency was extended for a seventh time despite calls for its end. It allows the government to rule by decree, often bypassing parliament. Such decrees have allowed the government to close news outlets and nongovernm­ental organizati­ons.

The European Union, which Turkey seeks to join, says the country is backslidin­g on bringing its laws in line with EU standards and has called for the country to lift its state of emergency. Last month, a United Nations report concluded that Turkey’s state of emergency had led to human rights violations, including arbitrary detentions and dismissals, torture and ill treatment.

 ?? Adem Altan AFP/Getty Images ?? TURKISH President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wants a quicker switch from a parliament­ary system to a presidenti­al system that allows him to consolidat­e powers.
Adem Altan AFP/Getty Images TURKISH President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wants a quicker switch from a parliament­ary system to a presidenti­al system that allows him to consolidat­e powers.

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