Will elections be a calculation of recent Turkish history?
The 2023 elections in Türkiye, which the international media describe as “the world’s most important election,” have substantial symbolic value by taking place at the beginning of the republic’s second century. All the campaigns focus on which political system, vision and leader will bring Türkiye into the next century.
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President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has announced that the elections would take place on May 14. The 2023 elections in Türkiye, which the international media describe as “the world’s most important election,” have substantial symbolic value by taking place at the beginning of the republic’s second century. All the campaigns focus on which political system, vision and leader will bring Türkiye into the next century.
The latest announcement added May 14, 1950, the day that the single-party era ended by popular vote, as a symbol. Announcing the date of the Turkish election, Erdoğan referred to late Prime Minister Adnan Menderes: “The nation will say ‘enough’ to the inept coup glorifiers that appear before the people as the 'table for six' on the same day after 73 years.” He also updated the Democratic Party’s (DP) famous slogan – “Enough! The people have the floor!” – as “Enough! The people have the floor, the decision and the future.”
In doing so, the Turkish president created an opportunity to place two decades of the Justice and Development Party (AK Party) rule within the context of Türkiye’s contemporary history. He also enabled himself to mount rhetorical pressure on right-wing parties that joined forces with the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), as part of the opposition bloc. As a result, in the future, Erdoğan can invoke a historical symbol: “The CHP will never change. So why are you in bed with the national chief’s party?”
If Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, the CHP's chairperson, becomes the opposition’s joint presidential candidate, Erdoğan will have plenty of opportunities to engage in that line of questioning. Likewise, if the "table for six" votes against the headscarf amendment in the Turkish Parliament, right-leaning voters will be receptive to the president’s critique of the main opposition party.
Moreover, the ruling alliance can easily talk about “an elected president under the tutelage of six party leaders” and argue that the opposition bloc “offers crisis amid global chaos.”
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