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Mayoral elections in Turkish cities do not usually grab the world’s attention.
But the defeat of the ruling party’s candidate for Istanbul mayor – once during its March election and then again, even more definitively in a June rematch – is a sign that Turkey’s most powerful political party is losing its influence after nearly two decades of control.
All political movements eventually run out of steam. But Erdogan dramatically changed Turkey, diminishing its democracy. The crumbling of Erdogan’s Justice and Development Party, known as AKP, will now change Turkey in other ways.
I’ve watched Turkish politics closely for three decades because of my work in the country training and consulting on education reform. As a Fulbright scholar, I lived in Turkey when Erdogan first took power and consolidated control over every aspect of Turkish society.
The world has a stake in its stability. Turkey is the 17th largest economy, according to the United Nations. And it is heavily in debt to foreign investors.
When Turkey’s currency, the lira, dropped by 20% last year, the slide risked a global crisis. Turkey is also an important NATO ally, allowing its land and air bases to be used for the alliance’s military operations into places such as neighboring Syria and Iraq.
The new political power struggle could spark a resurgent democracy in Turkey. The opposition against AKP could unify nationally.
But the struggle also has the potential to create cascading financial and political crises. This is what is at stake.
The Republican People’s Party, or CHP, is Turkey’s oldest political party, formed after the Turkish revolution of 1923.
İmamoğlu is 16 years Erdogan’s junior and had held the unassuming position of mayor of Beylikdüzü, a district of Istanbul.
Istanbul, a city of 16 million people, accounts for one-third of Turkey’s gross domestic product and is larger than many national economies. Whoever controls Istanbul’s massive municipal budget also controls its patronage.
Erdogan called the results of the first election, held in March, “blemished.” He asked his hand-picked High Election Council to investigate. That election was then annulled and a new election was held 23 June.
In the rematch, the usually fractious opposition to the AKP unified behind İmamoğlu, mounting a serious challenge to the AKP’s power in its largest base of support.
İmamoğlu’s campaign insisted that the first election was legitimate. Nevertheless, he ran a second time and his second victory was a landslide, with a margin of 800,000 votes compared to a 13,500 difference in the March contest.
When Erdogan finishes his current term, he will be the longest-serving national leader in Turkish history, having won every national election since 2002.
His latest term began 2018 by reversing Turkey’s progress toward a democratic state, using an alleged plot to overthrow the government as an excuse to arrest and jail military and political opponents.
He then leveraged the government’s ability to fine companies to his own benefit, both personal and political. Once-independent media outlets such as the Turkish Radio and Television Corporation and Anadolu Agency became messengers for Erdogan’s AKP party. As critics and challengers disappeared, Erdogan continued to consolidate his power over more of the country.
In 2017, Turkish voters approved a new constitution that he sought. It gave him the title of first “executive president” and very broad constitutional powers at the cost of the independence of the legislative and judicial branches of government.
But since then, there have been signs of growing unease with Erdogan’s tactics.
Earlier this year, more than 1,000 Turkish academics and their colleagues overseas signed an open letter condemning Erdogan’s bombing of more than 100 targets in Kurdish areas in Syria near its borders.
And just this month, Erdogan fired the head of the Central Bank in an apparent power struggle over the country’s interest rates, indicating that the bank was no longer firmly in his grip.
Continued controversies also threaten the support that does exist for Erdogan and his party.
For example, the new mayor of Istanbul immediately opened an investigation into whether the AKP misused public funds during the election. A preliminary investigation has revealed an expenditure of US$145 million to a youth foundation associated with Erdogan’s son, Bilal, as well as the quickly suppressed story of alleged sexual impropriety concerning Erdogan’s Minister of Finance (and son-in-law) Berat Albayrak. There have been many others over the years.
Erdogan’s autocratic past behavior – jailing lawmakers, political dissidents, journalists – clearly suggests he will make the erosion of his power painful for Turkey.
Erdogan’s popularity has always been tenuous. In both presidential races, including his most recent in 2018, Erdogan didn’t exceed 52.5% of the vote. The AKP in the parallel parliamentary election happening at the same time in June 2018 fell short of Erdogan’s share. This suggests AKP is far less popular than he is. Whether or how quickly the end for Erdogan may come will be determined by how united the opposition remains.
Overall, the aura of Erdogan’s invincibility seems to be dissipating and Turkey appears to be nearing the day that the transfer of power is viewed as a normal and nonexceptional part of political life.
When that day comes, Turkey will have become the democracy that was intended in the revolution of 1923.
(This is an opinion piece and the views expressed above are the author’s own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for the same. This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article here.)
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