Erdogan’s ruling party challenges results of local elections

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling
party on Tuesday appealed the results of local elections in Istanbul where
preliminary results give the opposition a razor-thin victory, sounding
confident that a recount will alter the outcome of the vote.
Nationwide, Erdogan’s conservative and Islamic-based
party won a majority of votes in Sunday’s elections, but lost its decades-old
stronghold of Ankara to the opposition and is trailing in the tight race for
Istanbul. The results, which are pending the appeals process, were one of
Erdogan’s most serious electoral setbacks in years.
Bayram Senocak, the top official in Istanbul for the
ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, told reporters he had filed
appeals to challenge results in all of the city’s 39 districts. The party was
seeking a recount to fix alleged irregularities as well as a reassessment of
invalid votes.
Some 319,578 votes in Istanbul that were declared
void “can affect the result of the election,” Senocak said.
The party is also contesting results in 25 districts
in Ankara, said Hakan Han Ozcan who heads the AKP in the capital.
Ali Ihsan Yavuz, an AKP deputy chairman, called the
elections “one of the most stained in our democratic history” — a claim the
opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP, quickly rejected.
“We won Ankara and Istanbul despite the fact that
the conditions were not equal,” said senior CHP official Muharrem Erkek, in an
apparent reference to the fact that the government-dominated media had hardly
covered the opposition. The ruling party is also frequently accused of using
state resources to campaign.
Erkek also accused the AKP of trying to win back the
election “it lost in the ballot box” by trying to get the invalidated votes
counted.
“You should know how to accept defeat with
maturity,” he said.
The CHP said it had objected to results in 22
Istanbul districts where it claims its votes were miscounted. The party said
its votes in Istanbul would increase by nearly 5,000 after a recount.
The district electoral boards have two days in which
to consider the appeals.
Meanwhile, the opposition’s mayoral candidate for
Istanbul, Ekrem Imamoglu, traveled to Ankara, to pay respects at the mausoleum
of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the secular republic founder, where large crowds
gathered to meet him, chanting “mayor Ekrem.”
Imamoglu garnered 48.8% of the votes, according to
the results that have yet to be confirmed. His rival, former Prime Minister
Binali Yildirim, took 48.5%.
Yildirim had declared victory on Sunday before
acknowledging on Monday that Imamoglu was leading by some 25,000 votes.
Ankara and Istanbul have been held by the AKP and
its Islamic-oriented predecessor for 25 years. Erdogan’s own ascent to power
began as Istanbul mayor in 1994.
Mansur Yavas, the candidate of the opposition
alliance, won 50.9% support in Ankara. The AKP’s candidate Mehmet Ozhaseki, a
former environment and urbanization minister, won 47.1% support.