Erdogan's popularity collapses in Turkish circles before upcoming elections
There are many indications that Turkish President Recep
Tayyip Erdogan’s end is approaching, especially following his catastrophic
failure to overcome opponents’ criticisms of his repressive policies, the
economic losses incurred by the Turkish economy in the wake of the corona
pandemic, his declining popularity, and his condemnation of the proposal for
early elections. Could the upcoming elections eliminate his expansionist
dreams?
Opposition Felicity Party head Temel Karamollaoglu declared
the ruling Justice and Development Party's (AKP) inability to solve the
economic crises facing the country, adding that after the decline in popularity
of the Turkish president and his party, the upcoming elections will write their
end.
“This situation cannot continue any longer. The fate of the
Justice and Development Party, which is unable to solve one crisis, will be
like the fate of the coalition that was buried in the ballot box after the
economic crisis in the year 2001, which was one of the major crises in the
history of the republic. So after this crisis, coalition partners were unable
to exceed the 10% needed to cross the electoral threshold, at which point the
Justice and Development Party won power after obtaining a majority of the votes.
Currently, the ruling party’s fate will be broken at the ballot boxes,” Karamollaoglu
said, according to Turkish opposition newspaper Yeniçağ.
Current crises
Turkey is facing many crises due to the deteriorating
situation as a result of Erdogan's repressive policies, which caused the
outbreak of clashes and defections from within the ranks of the AKP after its
failure on the political level and the loss of opportunities needed to compensate
the country for the huge losses that it has suffered. Erdogan’s policies have
failed to meet the demands of the street.
The economic crisis was the largest cause for the situation,
including the collapse of the Turkish lira, while poverty and unemployment have
increased, which heralds the end of Erdogan's reign and the unprecedented
decline in the popularity of the ruling party.
There is no doubt that the financial crisis caused by the pandemic
will hit Turkey. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) expects the country's
economy to shrink by 5% for 2020, leading to a high rate of inflation that
reached 11.39% in May, while the weakening lira has made imports more expensive.
Unemployment has reached 17.2%, while other forecasts indicate a possibility of
unemployment reaching 30%.
The lira has lost about 12% of its value this year due to
the repercussions of the corona crisis, amid fears of depleting the country's
foreign exchange reserves and the needs of foreign financing. The lira fell by
as much as 1% to 6.77 against the dollar, before reducing its losses to 0.7%,
due to low oil prices and low domestic demand in light of the pandemic,
according to Reuters.
Losing popularity
Regarding the decline of Erdogan's popularity in Turkish
circles due to the nature of his erroneous policies, Turkish affairs researcher
Mohamed Rabie El-Daihy told the Reference that Erdogan’s policies eventually led
to the rejection by many of those close to these policies, including by Ahmed
Davutoglu and Ali Babacan, who was one of the main pillars of Turkey’s economic
revival before Erdogan began governing Turkey alone. This decline in popularity
was noticed in the last municipal elections in which the AKP lost many seats to
the opposition.
Daihy said that the parliamentary elections also confirmed
this decline in popularity, as the AKP was unable to form a government on its
own. At the beginning of 2020, party members demanded the necessity of taking
measures that would revive the party’s popularity again, in addition to a request
by Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahceli to amend six laws
related to the elections and parties that would tighten the screws on the
opposition and new parties in Ankara. This would include amending the
conditions for running for president to tightening the screws on the new
parties, and basing winning elections on obtaining the highest number of votes,
abolishing the 50% +1 condition currently in place.
The upcoming elections in Turkey will be fiercer and more violent
in light of Erdogan's personal ambition to remain in power and achieve his goal
of reviving the Ottoman Caliphate through his colonial projects in the region, Daihy
stressed. He added that the decline in Erdogan’s popularity likely means that
his party will not win a majority in the upcoming elections, so Erdogan will
likely adopt his repressive methods of controlling parties and citizens by
issuing laws aimed at restricting freedoms and ensuring that he remains in
power as long as possible.




