Santa Fe New Mexican

Opposition’s win in Istanbul a blow to Turkey’s Erdogan

- By Zeynep Bilginsoy and Derek Gatopoulos

ISTANBUL — The opposition candidate for mayor of Istanbul celebrated a landmark win Sunday in a closely watched repeat election that ended weeks of political tension and broke the long hold President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s party had on leading Turkey’s largest city.

“Thank you, Istanbul,” Ekrem Imamoglu, 49, said to the tens of thousands of people who gathered to mark his victory after unofficial results showed he won a clear majority of the vote.

The governing party’s candidate, former Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim, conceded moments after returns showed him trailing well behind Imamoglu, 54 percent to 45 percent. Imamoglu increased his lead from a March mayoral election by hundreds of thousands of votes.

Erdogan congratula­ted Imamoglu in a tweet.

Analysts noted the president, who is grappling with an economic downturn and several internatio­nal crises, could limit the mayor’s power or undermine Imamoglu’s authority in other ways.

Imamoglu narrowly won an earlier mayoral election on March 31, but Erdogan’s Justice and Developmen­t Party, AKP, challenged the vote over alleged irregulari­ties. He spent 18 days in office before Turkey’s electoral board annulled the results after weeks of partial recounts.

The voided vote raised concerns domestical­ly and abroad about the state of Turkish democracy and whether Erdogan’s party would accept any electoral loss. AKP has governed Turkey since 2002.

“You have protected the reputation of democracy in Turkey with the whole world watching,” Imamoglu, his voice hoarse after weeks of campaignin­g, told supporters.

Jubilant supporters chanted “Mayor again! Mayor again!” Others hung out of cars, blaring horns and waving red-and-white Turkish flags.

Erdogan campaigned hard for Yildirim in Istanbul, where the president started his political career as mayor in 1994. Lisel Hintz, an assistant internatio­nal relations professor at Johns Hopkins University, said Imamoglu withstood a divisive campaign and prevailed with a positive message.

The significan­ce of his win “cannot be understate­d,” Hintz said.

“We now have to wait and see whether Imamoglu’s tenure as mayor will be interfered with in any way, whether by cutting off funding and hampering his office’s ability to provide services or by removing him under some legal pretext,” Hintz said.

AKP also lost control of the capital city of Ankara in Turkey’s March local elections, which were held as the country battled high inflation and two credit rating downgrades in the past year.

Melahat Ugen said she switched her vote to the opposition because she could not afford to cover basic expenses.

“I’ve certainly never voted left before,” she said. “But I’m 62, and a bag of onions costs too much. Everything is imported and we can’t afford it.”

 ?? LEFTERIS PIARAKIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Supporters of Ekrem Imamoglu, the candidate of the secular opposition Republican People’s Party, celebrate Sunday in Istanbul. In a blow to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Imamoglu declared victory in the Istanbul mayor’s race for a second time after Binali Yildirim, the government­backed candidate, conceded defeat in a high-stakes repeat election.
LEFTERIS PIARAKIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS Supporters of Ekrem Imamoglu, the candidate of the secular opposition Republican People’s Party, celebrate Sunday in Istanbul. In a blow to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Imamoglu declared victory in the Istanbul mayor’s race for a second time after Binali Yildirim, the government­backed candidate, conceded defeat in a high-stakes repeat election.

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