Poet and Islamist ideologue, Necip Fazl    Ksakrek. Wikicommons/ Berildeman. Some rights    reserved.Sultanism is on the rise. Beyond    Turkey, the election of Trump in the US, the resilience of    Putinism in Russia, all point out the emergence of highly    personalized regimes of a certain type. What distinguishes    sultanism from other forms of authoritarian regimes is its    unrestrained personal rule beyond ideological constrains and    rational legal forms, leading to the gradual removal of checks    and balances in the system. Even though sultanism is    traditionally more common under authoritarian regimes, features    of neo-sultanism can nowadays also exist in so-called    `democratic and societies of transition.  
    Max Weber developed the concept of sultanism primarily based on    unbounded personal discretion. Weber understood sultanism as an    oriental form of despotism, deriving the term from the Ottoman    state. But his study of the Ottoman Empire as a sultanistic    regime appears to have been less meticulous than his inquiries    into China, and India. In fact, the Ottoman state was a highly    sophisticated construct, with its separate palace, military,    and religious hierarchies, and its millet system for management    of non-Muslim religious communities. In this sense reducing the    entire Ottoman system and history to mere unrestrained personal    rule could be seriously misleading, not least because there    were serious attempts and movements to limit the powers of the    Sultan from 1876 onwards.  
    The kind of sultanism we are currently witnessing reflects a    more universal form: all sultanisms have some common features    but some are more pronounced. Not long ago Chehabi    and Linz argued that sultanism arises when traditional    domination develops an administration and a military force    which are purely personal instruments, primarily based on the    discretion of the ruler. They accept that the term can be    interpreted as having an `Orientalist subtext with Islamic    connotations. What I would like to call neo-sultanism, on the    other hand derives its legitimacy from popular support leading    to elected dictatorships. These are not necessarily hereditary    regimes but may portray strong features of patrimonialism.  
    Here I will limit my arguments to the Turkish context under    Erdogans increasingly autocratic rule. Erdogan has been    called islamo-fascist, neo-facist, neo-Ottomanist etc. but I    would like to contend that these terms are not particularly    helpful in making sense of the rise and consolidation of    Erdogans regime. Although aware of the ideological ambiguities    surrounding the term, neo-sultanism, I will deliberately    risk deploying it, since there is a need for a serious    debate to understand the shaping forces of the new presidential    regime in Turkey.  
    Although claiming to be above and beyond ideologies, Erdogans    neo-sultanism has been influenced by a cluster of ideologies    that represent a continuity in the strong state tradition in    Turkish history. His highly personalised authoritarian rule is    rooted in and inspired by a combination of hegemonic    ideological traits that can be located in the events leading to    the emergence of modern Turkey.  
    Successive governments since 1970s, under the leadership of    right-wing party leaders such as Turkes, Demirel and Ozal also    strongly favoured presidentialism above parliamentarianism. It    is not surprising for instance that Erdogan secured the support    of the veteran nationalist party head, Bahceli, as an ally in    the referendum for a `Turkish style, that is, a presidential    system, doing away with checks and balances and concentrating    power in the office of the presidency. The ideological    traditions of Islamism, nationalism, conservatism and    neo-liberalism, have always existed in modern Turkeys history    along discernible lines and movements in different combinations    and articulations, particularly after the1950s which witnessed    the first peaceful transfer of political power in Turkish    history. This is not to suggest that the Republican Party (the    CHP, in power in a one-party state until 1946) was not guilty    of this one nation sovereignty logic. But parliamentary    sovereignty, at least in rhetoric, was more appealing to its    leading cadres. Erdogan has been much more successful in fusing    statism, nationalism and religious conservativism, combined    with market fundamentalism in comparison with his right wing    successors.  
    Erdogan sits on the tip of an iceberg that represents a    historical power block originating from the late Ottoman    period. It is repeatedly argued that the political    pendulum in Turkey swings between Kemalist secularism and    religious conservatism. According to this binary view, Turkish    society is divided along secular conservative religious camps.    This false dichotomy is simplistic. And like all false    dichotomies it leads to false conclusions. In fact Kemalism, in    the true sense of the Kemalist ideology, has not been in power    in Turkey since the end of the Republican Peoples Partys    one-party regime in 1950.  
    The coming to power of the conservative Democrat Party in 1950    elections marked a clear transition from utopian republicanism    to a national conservative regime with authoritarian    inclinations. Even the Turkish armed forces gradually abandoned    a pure Kemalist ideology but not their role as protector of    state and sovereignty. Their attempt in 1960 to reintroduce    Kemalism failed, confronted by the same conservative    nationalist Islamist power block. By the 1980s, the armed    forces had become much more defensive and apologetic about the    credentials of Kemalism and regarded the CHP as yet another    failed political party on a par with the Islamic and    conservative parties. It seems the Turkish military was    well-aligned with the exigencies of neo-liberalism and identity    politics in Turkey in leaving the orthodoxy of Kemalism behind.  
    I would like to make a bold claim here: in Turkey the state has    indeed been the sole power since its inception, with its claims    to hegemonic legitimacy justified by the protection accorded by    conservative, nationalist and Islamist parties alike to the    core component of the state  the Turkish and Sunni Muslim    nation. The problem has consisted in who speaks for and    controls the state, and protects the state against the others    of Turkish Sunni core identity rather than protecting its    citizens, regardless of their religious affiliations and ethnic    background, against the state. Raison detat, devletin bekasi    has always been the prevailing ideology. Historically, the    Gulenist movement has been an integral part of this historical    ideological block. The recent spat between Gulenists and    Erdogan was an internal fight within the same hegemonic block    over the ownership of the state and its institutions. The    nature of this conflict was not strictly about ideological    differences, but a power struggle over the hegemony of the    state and its use of force.  
    It is often claimed that Erdogan is a neo-Ottomanist. But this    label is not accurate as the history and the political system    of the Ottoman Empire was highly chequered and complex. In    fact, Erdogans neo-sultanism has been inspired by one    particular sultan, namely, Sultan Abdulhamid who is Erdogans    favourite. Abdulhamid, known as the Red Sultan( 1876-1909),    attempted to revive Pan-Islamism and the status of Khalif as a    last resort to holding the Empire together. Abdulhamid is        also known in Kemalist discourse as a despotic sultan who    suspended both the first short-lived Constitution and the    Ottoman Parliament in 1878 after seizing absolute power.  
    Erdoan also admires the Islamist-conservative poet and    political ideologue Necip Fazl Ksakrek (1904-1983) and often    recites his poems in public. Kisakurek is a favoured poet and    writer in nationalist and conservative Islamic circles. He was    also an advocate for the introduction of a totalitarian    Islamist regime inspired by the Turkish-Islamist synthesis in    Turkey, to be ruled by a supreme leader he called Bayce    (The Head Exalted One). Erdogans desire to install a    presidential system in Turkey has been inspired by Kisakureks    Basyuce concept as the representative of the Sunni majority.    His understanding of national will is not the peoples of Turkey    but of that predominant Turkish Sunni majority. (See Necip    Fazil Kisakurek, deolocya rgs, Plait    of Ideology, first published in 1963.)  
    Moreover, the fashionable distinction between the elitist,    westernized so-called white Turks and the allegedly real    and authentic nation composed of so-called black Turks, as    produced and widely disseminated by the AKP in pro-government    think tanks and media, also appealing to some liberal circles    in Turkey and abroad, stems from Ksakreks oeuvre. Erdogan    attacks western educated white Turks at every opportunity,    while presenting himself as the     saviour of the marginalized religious conservative masses    by the Republic, black Turks, the resented and the    downtrodden (mazlum).  
    Erdogan is the most powerful leader for more than a decade in    Turkey, yet he manages to emerge from every crisis as the    martyr of history, accusing internal and external forces of    working against him, including leaders of foreign countries,    financial institutions and international media. This is a siege    mentality that often seems to work in his    favour.   
    The Ottomanization of public space has been another feature of    Erdogans neo-sultanist drive. Erdogan has often announced    crazy projects that have included grandiose schemes for    bridges, a canal to parallel the Bosphorous, cavernous shopping    centres and prestige projects such as the, mega mosque on one    of Istanbuls beauty spots, Camlica Hill, ostensibly the    biggest airport in Europe and so on. These projects are often    named after great Ottoman Sultans and figures.  
    Reviving the Ottoman Barracks in Taksim Square was no random    choice as the rebellion against Sultan Abdulhamid started    there. Like the Ottoman Sultans, Erdogan wants to be remembered    as the great architect to rebuild and recreate in the image of    the Ottoman Empire. As     Ufuk Adak puts it, the imposition of a Disney Park    narrative of Ottoman history on the traditional structure and    skyline of Istanbul has led to an overly simplified and callous    recreation of the past.  
    The Ottoman state was the owner of all land in terms of a    trusteeship which was not alienable. As     sociologist Caglar has argued, unlike the Ottomans Erdoan    thinks of public land as his property to alienate, develop and    sell as he wishes. Public space will be privatised in the best    neoliberal manner. All this has been justified within a retro    developmentalist discourse  
    It is crucial to understand the spatial dimension of Erdogans    neo-Sultanistic hegemony. He was a two-term mayor of    Istanbul in the 1990s where he served his political    apprenticeship. Space acts as an integral element of Erdogans    hegemony. The transformation of public space reflects the    outcome of the uneven capitalist development in the lopsided    crony-capitalist-led urbanization, where the size of    mega-building projects, flashy shopping centres next to    deprived regions and poor neighbourhoods, act simultaneously as    the signs of development and aspiration. Erdogans hegemony    heavily relies on the production of everyday geopolitics in    urban space. In this sense the reproduction of the space itself    tends to restructure society.  
    In Turkey, Erdogan is sole sovereign in defining the    exception. Erdogans neo-sultanistic regime has established a    permanent state of emergency. It was the political theorist    Carl Schmitt in his examination of conditions in the democratic    German Weimar Republic who first touched on the notion of a    state of exception. Schmitt essentially conceived of    constitutionality as something decided by sovereign power    which could also decide the exceptions to it. Through its    justification of infinite detention and the surveillance of    citizens, law is appealed to in order to effectively create    spaces of exception within democratic societies devoid of    law. Erdogans constitutionally mandated exception now    becomes a rule which abrogates both constitutionality and the    rule of law over the democratic order and institutions.  
    It is no accident that Erdogan put the extension of a state of    emergency at the top of his governments agenda the day after    claiming victory in a contested and apparently rigged    referendum on a new constitution that dramatically extends his    powers. Even before the referendum, Erdogan ruled with decrees    side-lining the Parliament. So far, the decrees have allowed    Erdogan to jail more than 40,000 people accused of plotting a    failed coup, to fire or suspend more than 140,000 additional    people, including academics, to shut down about 1,500 civil    groups, repossess universities, arrest at least 120    journalists, and close more than 150 news media outlets.  
    Erdogan is the new sultan of Turkey. As a result of the    referendum he has acquired extraordinary powers unprecedented    in Turkish history since the times of Ataturk.  
    However, the legitimacy of his regime is not without question.    He won the referendum by a very narrow majority. The referendum    took place under the state of emergency and undemocratic    conditions. The outcome of the referendum was not particularly    favourable to Erdogan. Erdogan seems moreover to have lost his    urban support base, including the neighbourhoods of Istanbul    that carried him to where he is now.  
    He has managed to codify his de facto powers by the symbolic    approval of `the people in whose name he will exercise    sovereignty. The fact remains that a highly divided, polarized    and personalized regime in Turkey has become difficult to    sustain. Official laws and rules are now subservient to a whole    range of informal laws centred on family, religious    affiliations, ethnicity and personal allegiance to Erdogan. The    all-powerful Erdogan is now Turkeys new Sultan, Turkeys    Basyuce.  
    In Erdogans new sultanate, the distinction between regime and    state is blurred and the institutions are hollowed out.    Consequently, the constitutional faade and the futile    referendum do not mean much. In Erdogans new sultanate,    official laws and rules co-exist with and are often subservient    to a whole range of other "informal" laws centred on his    family, religious affiliations, business interests or simply    personal allegiance to Erdogan. Erdogans sultanate is    characterized by corruption, patrimonialism and buttressed by    an increasingly subservient army and party. His personality    cult may lead to dynasticism. Having lost much of his initial    social support and strong base, he now has to rely on fear,    rewards and nepotistic networks. He will be sustained by    kleptocratic relationships and rule with a constitutional    faade lacking institutional structures.  
    Erdogans extremely personalized sultanistic regime, is in    reality fragile, ineffective, and potentially unstable. Its    institutions could, as a result of an inability to cope with a    sudden economic downturn, produce his downfall. Sultanistic    regimes do not last long. As the legitimation of the regime is    solely based on his highly and extremely personalized power,    should this figure be overthrown or die, the sultanistic regime    collapses. Fascist regimes organize their society strictly    according to their ideology: in neo-sultanictic regimes society    is organized according to the whims of the sultan, ideology is    deployed only when it serves their personal interests and    supreme authority lies above the state and its    institutions.  
Link:
The Sultan is dead, long live Bayce Erdogan Sultan! - Open Democracy