Recep Tayyip Erdoğan: The One Man Regime

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his ruling Justice and Development Party (A.K.P.) easily won Turkey's recent national elections.

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has dominated Turkish politics since his rise to prime minister in 2003, and president in 2014.  During that period he has slowly gained control of almost all levers of power.  However, when it came to the yesterday’s presidential and parliamentary elections, the first in Turkey’s history, there were doubts that Erdoğan could pull out an easy victory.  While normally it is a sure thing to bet on him, his opponents seemed united in challenging him.  In the end Erdoğan won in the first round of voting, capturing over 52 percent of the vote.  Also, his ruling party, the Justice and Development Party (A.K.P.), had a strong showing and retained their majority.

“The winners of the June 24 elections are Turkey, the Turkish nation, sufferers of our region and all oppressed (people) in the world,” Erdoğan said in a victory speech.  Though, much can be said about the fairness of the elections.  Foreign policy expert Elmira Bayrasli said in a tweet, “Turkey’s election was held under a state of emergency, with media in the hands of state/majority control—so it can hardly be considered fair.”  The Organization for Security and Co-operation echoed the same sentiment, “The voters had a genuine choice in the 24 June early presidential and parliamentary elections in Turkey, but the conditions for campaigning were not equal, with the incumbent president and ruling party enjoying an undue advantage, including in excessive coverage by government-affiliated public and private media outlets, the international observers concluded in a preliminary statement today.”

Erdoğan’s opposition had a lot of fuel in challenging him this time around.  Turkey’s agriculture has collapsed, the value of the Turkish lira has plunged, and food prices have been rising.  The Kurds, who in the past provided a key source of support, have been leaving Erdoğan because of his policies, particularly his military operations against the Kurds in Syria’s Afrin region.

With his new victory, Erdoğan gains even more powers.  The new powers were narrowly won in a referendum last year in a vote where fairness was also question will be granted at the start of the Erdoğan’s new five-year term.  Under the new system Erdoğan will gain wide-ranging executive authority with parliament’s power curtailed, and the office of the prime minister will be abolished.  Yesterday’s win cements Turkey as a one-man regime. 

About Brian F. Bridgeforth 114 Articles
Brian F. Bridgeforth is a social media political commentator with a background that includes advising and managing political campaigns at local, state, and federal levels. His social media activities have in the past caught the attention of CNN and the Wall Street Journal along with a number of politically oriented blogs.