The beginning of the end for the Erdogan era
During his election campaign appearances, President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan repeated one sentiment over and over again: An AKP loss in
big cities would cause chaos in Turkey. Now that the local elections are over,
there seems to be more to it than that: The political survival of the president
could be at stake, because these elections were one of the biggest defeats
Erdogan has yet suffered.
The AKP lost many important cities to the
opposition. It became apparent on election night that almost all mayoral
offices in the coastal cities of Izmir, Aydin, Antalya, Adana and Mersin would
go to the social democratic opposition party CHP.
But then came the next blow for Erdogan: After more
than 25 years of Islamic-conservative supremacy, a surprising change is now
looming in Ankara, too. The republican challenger, Mansur Yavas, will fill the
mayor’s chair in the capital for the next five years — a huge blow to the AKP.
As Istanbul goes …
In Istanbul, tensions continue to run high: The
entire country waited to see the results of the head-to-head race between CHP
and AKP until late at night. But suddenly the election commission stopped
issuing further results.
When AKP mayoral candidate and former prime minister
Binali Yildirim announced his election victory shortly before midnight, but
then disappeared, many Turks became suspicious. The rumor quickly spread that
ballot papers for Istanbul had been manipulated in order to bring in a win for
the AKP. “We will not sleep for the next 48 hours,” CHP party leader
Kilicdaroglu announced in a press conference at night.
Now there is fear that CHP candidate Ekrem
Imamoglu’s victory in Istanbul was taken from him through electoral fraud. One
indicator for this could be that the “High Electoral Commission” is still not
publishing any results for Istanbul. This, in turn, did not prevent the CHP
chairman from announcing at another press conference this morning that Imamoglu
had won the majority of the votes counted.
One thing seems certain: if Istanbul actually goes
to the AKP, the worst is to be feared: Protests, street battles, even the
storming of the presidential palace ―
everything is possible, according to observers on the ground. Independent
European election observers also went on record to say that in their opinion,
no free elections had taken place.
April Fool’s joke
Despite its successes, CHP should not rejoice too
soon: Erdogan will leave no stone unturned in his efforts to sabotage the the
new mayors. Even if he appears reasonable now and admits that the government
wants to learn from its mistakes, it is uncertain what Erdogan’s next step will
be.
The opposition fears that people in the east and
southeast of Anatolia in particular, where the pro-Kurdish HDP managed to win
numerous municipalities, could see AKP “stewards” forced on them. This step has
in the past been an effective way for Erdogan to silence opposition
politicians.
Furthermore, Erdogan recently announced that the
economic crisis was to end on April 1. At the time, stock market experts suspected
it to be an early April Fool’s joke: If Erdogan could solve the country’s
economic problems so quickly and on command, why would he wait until after the
local elections?
Erdogan’s rule now unclear
Whether Erdogan will remain in the presidential
palace until the end of his regular term or not is one of the key questions
after this electoral defeat. It now seems quite possible that he will name a
successor way before his term comes to an end.
It is also conceivable that a new
Islamic-conservative movement will be formed. For some time now it has been
assumed, even among moderate politicians, that former Erdogan supporters want
to found a new party. If they take this step, it is quite possible that AKP
delegates desert Erdogan and join the new party ―
quite a common practice among politicians in Turkey.
The decisive result of these local elections is that
President Erdogan has not been strengthened ―
on the contrary. His reputation has suffered a severe blow within Turkey and,
above all, among his own electorate.