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June 22, 2018 www.intellinews.com I Page 2
Turkish elections: Erdogan’s fall from grace
election, even those pushed by the opposition, have put Recep Tayyip Erdogan in front. There are no exceptions. He is certain to top the presidential poll on Sunday (June 24).
But it is far from clear whether he will secure over 50% of the vote and prevent a second round a fortnight later.
It is also unclear whether his Justice and Devel- opment Party (AKP) and its nationalist allies will secure a parliamentary majority.
If this were a healthy democracy, any decent political analyst’s job would be to tell the story of how Turkey’s most popular leader since Kemal Ataturk is falling from grace.
That would be a story of the country’s struggling economy, heavily dependent on foreign investment, and how voters are feeling the pinch. The Turkish li- ra’s value against the US dollar — a metric just about everyone in Turkey follows — has dropped by nearly a fifth since Erdogan called the election in April.
It would also be a story of the uncharacteristically poor campaign Erdogan is running. He has made some significant policy reversals: he started this campaign firmly insisting the state of emergency would remain in place and that there were no plans to offer young men the option to buy their way out of compulsory military conscription.
He has since changed his mind on both, mean- ing his manifesto is out of date before people in Turkey have had a chance to vote on it.
The final piece of this idealised tale would be the campaign run by Turkey’s opposition, a collective show of energy and creativity not seen in the past 16 years of AKP rule.
In our hypothetically healthy Turkish democracy, the question would not be how soon Erdogan would win, but whether he could even scrape into a second round.
The reality, however, is that the scales are heavily tipped in his favour in this election, just like they were ahead of last year’s constitutional referendum.
Officially, that contest was a narrow victory for the government, but allegations of vote tampering meant that — for the first time in living memory — the opposition refused to concede a Turkish election result.
Today, the AKP still dominates the media and the legal system. It holds sway over the two state-
run organisations that will shape the narrative on Sunday: the electoral commission, known as the YSK, which will operate the vote and oversee the count at the ballot boxes; and the Anadolu Agency, which will report the results from election centres across the country.
Most opinion polls say the election will be as close as last year’s referendum.
But this time, the rules are different: some ballot papers without an official mark will still be count- ed, while people living in some remote villages will find it harder to vote because their ballot boxes have been relocated.
Plainly, the fear is this Sunday’s results will be as disputed as those of the referendum.
It is with this in mind that Turkey’s opposition par- ties are deploying hundreds of observers, particu- larly in southeastern provinces, to watch as votes are cast and counted.
What of his rivals?
If the clear favourite has run a poor campaign, what of his rivals? Muharrem Ince, Meral Aksener and Selahattin Demirtas have all surprised observ- ers with their ability to make themselves heard in