Türkiye elections: Fate of second round lies within results
Türkiye successfully held a historic election in line with democratic maturity. Governments around the world watched closely as 88.92% of eligible voters participated in the election and Turkish democracy proved its strength yet again. In the end, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan beat his opponent, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, by almost 5 percentage points. Meanwhile, the People’s Alliance claimed 322 parliamentary seats – the majority – with 49.5%.
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Türkiye successfully held a historic election in line with democratic maturity. Governments around the world watched closely as 88.92% of eligible voters participated in the election and Turkish democracy proved its strength yet again. In the end, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan beat his opponent, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, by almost 5 percentage points. Meanwhile, the People’s Alliance claimed 322 parliamentary seats – the majority – with 49.5%.
Those results gave Erdoğan three advantages: Parliamentary majority, leading the first round, and leading by a clear margin. Judging by the turnout rate, the incumbent is expected to win the second round quite comfortably. He was relaxed and confident on Sunday night as he delivered his "balcony speech" at the Justice and Development Party's (AK Party) headquarters. At the same time, Erdoğan kicked off his campaign for the second round on a strong note.
By contrast, the opposition has collapsed in many ways. Before Sunday’s elections, pro-opposition echo chambers, pollsters and social media users raised expectations to such an extent that many opposition voters were left severely frustrated the following morning. It is possible to expect that part of the electorate to lash out at Kılıçdaroğlu and the Republican People’s Party (CHP) because they had been told that the opposition was destined to claim the parliamentary majority with Kılıçdaroğlu becoming president with 55%.
On election day, the opposition’s spokespeople not only frustrated their own supporters. The mayors of Istanbul and Ankara, Ekrem Imamoğlu and Mansur Yavaş, falsely claimed that Kılıçdaroğlu was set to become the next president – a horrible start.
Ahead of the second round, the opposition will try to campaign like the country will hold a completely new election. That, however, would be futile because (unlike Erdoğan) they kicked off the campaign on a negative note. Several hours later, the main opposition leader could do nothing more than appear before cameras, accompanied by two mayors and five party chairs, for less than two minutes to make accusations against Erdoğan and claim he would win the second round.
On Monday, he posted a short video on Twitter – “I am here” – which seemed to be about the CHP’s upcoming leadership race instead of the presidential election’s second round.
It will be difficult for the opposition candidate to persuade his alliance’s supporters to participate in the second round. He will claim to have performed well on Sunday, stressing that he received 44% of the vote, yet the CHP received just 25% despite fielding a presidential candidate. Let us add that the main opposition incorporated four right-wing parties into its candidate lists.
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