- The duality between authoritarianism and democracy, rooted in anti-Erdoğanism,
- Spinning the slightest problem or most minor false claim into an existential threat to call for early elections,
- The idea of restoring the parliamentary system of government.
Aim to overthrow Erdoğan
The opposition lacks a coherent post-2023 vision for Turkey and that is their single greatest weakness. Although leaders of two major opposition parties, Republican People's Party (CHP) chairman Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and Good Party (IP) chairwoman Meral Akşener, come up more and more frequently in conversations about the presidential race, it won’t be easy for the opposition to settle on a definite candidate to challenge President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in 2023.How will you govern?
They absolutely hate the question of how they intend to govern after the election. Their response is that the opposition should unite and overthrow the current president – everything else, they say, can be figured out in due time. That’s because they understand that questions about policy stand in the way of a united opposition. An opposition candidate with no plan or agenda cannot even impress foreign companies with investments in Turkey – let alone the Turkish people themselves. President Erdoğan, too, highlighted the opposition’s lack of a roadmap in a recent address to the Justice and Development Party (AK Party)’s provincial chairpersons: “We cannot hand over this country to some folks, who go around like an idler wheel, with no direction.” Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) Chairman Devlet Bahçeli delivered an even stronger response: “The preconditions of the establishment of Kurdistan, a 150-year-old oppressive and imperialist plot, will have been fulfilled if, by some mistake, the Alliance of Contempt ends up in charge and Kılıçdaroğlu becomes president.” Some commentators may view those statements as part of an attempt to fuel the "survival" debate ahead of the 2023 elections. Yet the opposition leaders, who talk about “overthrowing” rather than “replacing” the government, are already engaging in a more radical debate over "survival" with references to “the dictatorial regime.” It seems unlikely for the opposition to win anything by engaging in that debate alone – without actually presenting a common political vision or unveiling a concrete plan.[Daily Sabah, July 12 2021]