Most people in Turkey do not trust Erdoğan
Good people trust Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan,
a party loyalist said, responding to a global poll that found most people do
not.
More than 600,000 people cast votes in the Spectator
Index survey on Twitter, which posed the question “Do you have confidence in
Turkey's president Recep Erdoğan?” More than 74 percent
of participants responded negatively by the time it ended on Wednesday.
“Good people trust Erdoğan
and have full confidence in him,” Yasin Aktay, an adviser to Erdoğan
in the president's capacity as leader of the governing Justice and Development
Party (AKP), said in a tweet.
Aktay went on to question Erdoğan’s detractors, as well
as the Spectator Index’s
motivation for publishing the survey, which was open to all Twitter users,
regardless of their location or nationality.
“We know the problem of those who have not
confidence in him, and we do not have a confidence with the intention of this
question,” he said.
There were almost 10,000 comments on the poll when
voting ended. Many people expressed loyalty and love for Erdoğan,
citing his success in managing the Turkish economy and his efforts to elevate
the global status of Turkey and to give a voice to the Islamic world. Others
labelled him a dictator, a destabilising influence on the region and said he
did not represent Muslims.
The Spectator Index has 1.7 million followers on
Twitter and publishes news, statistics and opinion polls. It also offers a
subscription-based daily briefing on weekdays via its website.



