Good Party's unpaid alliance bill and CHP's key challenges
The IP leadership’s refusal to endorse the main opposition Republican People’s Party’s (CHP) mayoral candidates in Istanbul and Ankara caused uproar among local chapters and council members, whom those municipalities support financially, as well as other proponents of electoral alliances. In other words, Ekrem Imamoğlu and Mansur Yavaş, widely seen as mayors of the 2019 alliance, used their influence over the IP – arguably the price that IP Chair Meral Akşener and her movement are expected to pay.
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With the storm inside the Good Party (IP) raging, resignations and expulsions continue. The main reason behind the current turmoil is the movement’s commitment not to join any alliances for next year’s municipal elections.
The IP leadership’s refusal to endorse the main opposition Republican People’s Party’s (CHP) mayoral candidates in Istanbul and Ankara caused uproar among local chapters and council members, whom those municipalities support financially, as well as other proponents of electoral alliances. In other words, Ekrem Imamoğlu and Mansur Yavaş, widely seen as mayors of the 2019 alliance, used their influence over the IP – arguably the price that IP Chair Meral Akşener and her movement are expected to pay.
It was inevitable that the IP would pay for its past alliances with the CHP and others. It was going to foot that bill sooner or later. It is no secret that the IP had already suffered from its CHP collaboration. Nowadays, the movement has to risk short-term losses to bounce back and try to gain momentum in the longer run.
It would be wrong to underestimate the extent of the political rapprochement and integration between the CHP and the IP in the 2019 and 2023 elections. Despite the obvious problems between Akşener and the CHP’s previous Chairperson Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, the two movements aligned more closely with reference to Imamoğlu and Yavaş, encouraging closer cooperation between their supporters. Breaking that bond would have obviously been difficult.
The IP currently experiences all the challenges of trying to engage in political activities “independently” of the main opposition party. The CHP, whose proposal was rejected, targets the IP and the right-wing fringe parties (whose parliamentary candidates ran on the CHP ticket in May 2023) by calling for “joining forces at the popular level.”
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