AK Party-led alliance and YRP ties as election nears: Quo vadis?
With the municipal election just three weeks away, the relationship between the People’s Alliance and the New Welfare Party ("Yeniden Refah" in Turkish - YRP) becomes more apparent. The most significant development of the current election cycle was the opposition parties, which formed an alliance with the main opposition, the Republican People’s Party (CHP), in May 2023 and decided to field their own candidates.
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With the municipal election just three weeks away, the relationship between the People’s Alliance and the New Welfare Party ("Yeniden Refah" in Turkish - YRP) becomes more apparent. The most significant development of the current election cycle was the opposition parties, which formed an alliance with the main opposition, the Republican People’s Party (CHP), in May 2023 and decided to field their own candidates.
The Good Party (IP), which talks about the "third way," embodied that decision most obviously. Its chairwoman, Meral Akşener, remained determined in the face of CHP’s mounting criticism and several resignations from her party.
The Victory Party (ZP), Democracy and Progress Party (DEVA), the Felicity Party (SP), the Future Party (GP) and the Homeland Party (MP) also fielded their own mayoral candidates.
The electoral alliances of 2019 and 2023 took a toll on the popularity of all opposition parties – except CHP. Moreover, the CHP’s condescending jabs alienated the right-wing parties.
Meanwhile, the pro-PKK Green Left Party (YSP), informally known as the Peoples' Equality and Democracy Party (DEM Party), fielded its own candidates (due to intraparty divisions and repeated warnings from the terrorist organization PKK’s commanders in northern Iraq), yet also formed a complex and partial alliance with CHP. For example, the movement has a mayoral candidate in Istanbul who has not been campaigning.
Again, the complex relationship between CHP and YSP continues to be shaped by rhetorical battles, negotiations for council seats and certain districts where one of those parties does not field any candidates.
The opposition parties, in turn, are campaigning by criticizing the governing alliance and the main opposition alike – as part of the "third-way" approach. However, It is impossible to say that their arguments successfully created a certain political climate. By contrast, the CHP leadership refrains from criticizing their former allies in an attempt to win over their respective supporters.
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