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Erdogan is prepared to sacrifice Turkey’s economy to support Hamas, Foreign Minister Katz charges – The Times of Israel

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Erdogan is prepared to sacrifice Turkey's economy to support Hamas, Foreign Minister Katz charges - The Times of Israel

Erdogan Politically Wounded But Still Turkey’s Dominant Power – Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington

Results of the March 31 nationwide local elections in Turkey represent the first true defeat for President Recep Tayyip Erdogans Justice and Development Party (AKP) since its 2001 founding. Although the previous local elections, in 2019, were widely interpreted as a defeat for Erdogan, as the secular Republican Peoples Party (CHP) opposition won five of Turkeys six largest cities including the two major prizes, Istanbul and national capital Ankara AKP actually won the elections by most measures: provincial capital mayoralties, provincial assemblies, and village councils as well as overall mayoral vote totals. AKP even won majorities in the Istanbul and Ankara municipal councils in 2019, complicating life for the CHP mayors of those cities.

This time, however, CHP was the clear winner. Turkeys most common measures of performance in local elections, held every five years, are provincial capitals won there are 81 in all and overall vote totals in mayoral elections. By that standard, CHP won hands down, with 35 provincial capital mayoralties and 37.7% of the vote; AKP won only 24 provincial capital mayoralties and 35.5% of the vote. The other 22 provincial capital mayoralties were won by smaller parties, including 10 by pro-Kurdish Peoples Democracy Party (DEM), eight by the ultranationalist Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) (Erdogans main coalition partner), and a surprising two by extreme Islamist Yeniden Refah Party (YRP). CHP increased its dominance of the big cities; the cities it won represent the overwhelming majority of Turkeys population and gross domestic product production. AKP did, however, capture a slight majority of the subprovincial district mayoralties, mainly on the strength of its Central Anatolian strongholds.

The result marked the dramatic acceleration of a trend already underway in the 2019 elections. In that contest, AKP slipped from 48 provincial capital mayoralties captured in 2014 to 39. Thus, over the course of two sets of local elections, AKP has lost half its provincial mayoralties.

In fact, the vote caps a period of several years of a loosening AKP hold on the electorate. After winning a dominant majority in its first three parliamentary elections (2002, 2007, and 2011), it has failed to recapture that majority in three of the past four parliamentary elections and has become increasingly dependent on a difficult ultranationalist partner for its parliamentary majority. In 2023, Erdogan for the first time was forced to a second round before winning reelection as president; he has never received more than 52.6% in any of his three direct-vote presidential elections. And, in 2017, Erdogan won, by just a hairs breadth, a referendum on vastly expanding the powers of the presidency; further, a controversy over the counting of ballots cast a cloud over that success. Thus, the March 31 opposition victory, although unprecedented and unexpected, was the culmination of years of gradually declining support for Erdogan and his weakened but still-formidable party.

For all of the fanfare over CHPs triumph, AKP lost the elections more than CHP won them. No doubt the key factor in the CHP-AKP reversal of fortunes was voter anger over the economy, highlighted by galloping inflation (now at 68.5% officially and probably much higher) and the tumbling value of the lira, the Turkish currency, alongside an increasingly tight monetary policy. Turkeys 16 million pensioners, more than one-quarter of the electorate, were particularly furious that their most recent cost of living adjustment was well below the rate of inflation, as Erdogan surprisingly held to an orthodox economic policy, instituted just after his 2023 reelection, rather than break the bank with handouts.

Additionally, turnout was the lowest for any parliamentary or local election since 2004, mainly, it appears, to the detriment of AKP. Fractionalization on the Islamist right reinforced AKPs problems. Two extreme parties that backed Erdogan and allied with AKP in the 2023 presidential and parliamentary elections ran their own candidates this time, drawing votes from AKP candidates. One of them, YRP, actually won two mayoralties on its own and finished with the third-highest vote total nationally (6.2%), after CHP and AKP. If every vote that went to YRP or Huda-Par the other extreme Islamist party that broke from its coalition with AKP had gone to AKP instead, AKP would have won five additional provincial mayoralties, and CHP would have won two fewer.

On the positive side of the ledger for CHP, its candidates were generally considered younger and more vigorous, reinforced by the high-profile candidacy of the dynamic incumbent mayor, Ekrem Imamoglu, in Istanbul, Turkeys largest and most dynamic city. AKP candidates, by contrast, tended to be seen as lackluster, the well seemingly near dry after more than two decades of the partys having held power.

Also working in CHPs favor was the clever voting pattern of the Kurds, who seem to have voted for CHP candidates in large numbers in provinces where the candidates of the pro-Kurdish DEM stood no chance, while voting for DEM elsewhere, particularly in Kurdish-majority provinces.

DEMs strategy helped CHP, but the pro-Kurdish party continues to confront problems with Turkish authorities. It is contesting near-miss losses in one provincial capital and several subprovincial districts mainly based on votes it claims were cast illegally by soldiers and policemen. However, mayors from pro-Kurdish parties generally face their biggest problems after taking office. Since 2016, the Erdogan government has regularly removed most of their elected mayors on alleged security grounds, accusing them of supporting terrorism, and replaced them with state-appointed trustees. In 2019, the state removed 48 of 65 elected provincial and district HDP (forerunner of DEM) mayors within six months of the elections. (DEM won back 37 of those 48 on March 31.) CHP and particularly Istanbuls mayor, Imamoglu, have condemned this practice of unilaterally replacing elected local officials. Indirect DEM support for CHP candidates March 31 will do nothing to endear the party to Erdogan and his administration.

The headline individual winner was Imamoglu with his reelection as mayor of Istanbul. In what was expected to be a close race with the AKP candidate, Imamoglu swept to a big victory, 51.1% to 39.6%. Istanbul is not only Turkeys largest and most economically vibrant city; its the city that catapulted Erdogan to national fame when he won the mayoralty in 1994 and the city he most craved to return to AKPs column in the 2024 elections.

Because of his upset victory in 2019 and his strong reelection in 2024, Imamoglu has emerged as the face of CHP. Many observers see him as the favorite to be the CHP candidate for the upcoming 2028 presidential election.

In many respects, Imamoglu is the long-awaited dream candidate for CHP not only secular and center-left (the norm in social democratic CHP) but comfortable in religious environments and with appeal to many Kurds, who once shunned CHP because of its historic Turkish nationalism. At 53, he is relatively young, smart, charismatic, and a good retail politician sometimes seen (in a positive sense) as an Erdogan of the left.

Four years is a long time, however, and Imamoglu is not a sure-fire bet to be CHPs candidate in 2028. For one, he is under judicial assault from the state on trumped-up charges and could be removed from office and banned from politics for up to five years. Also, other challengers could emerge. The highly popular CHP mayor of Ankara, Mansur Yavas, is such a figure, although he would be 73 in 2028, one year younger than Erdogan. Another is 49-year-old Ozgur Ozel, a parliamentarian who took over CHP in November with Imamoglus backing and can boast that, in less than five months at the helm, he led the Ataturk-founded CHP to its first nationwide victory since 1977.

Erdogan was wounded politically by these and other recent elections but far from mortally. He retains immense power as president. He is commander in chief of the military, and he will remain the dominant player in foreign policy and the international face of Turkey. Crucially, he has a firm grip on the judiciary, and when judges show independence not to Erdogans liking, he sometimes simply ignores the rulings or has them overturned by other courts, even if they formally lack the authority to do so.

Local elections differ from parliamentary and presidential elections in that they are widely seen as a judgment on the government, particularly its record on domestic governance. Foreign policy and national security issues have virtually no impact. Although AKPs defeat is an embarrassment, it is not at all conclusive proof that Erdogan couldnt win another presidential election, when a wider array of issues comes into play. Many people are salivating over the prospect of an Erdogan-Imamoglu heavyweight battle in the next presidential elections.

Most likely, that wont happen. Erdogan has said hes run his final election. That could be dismissed as so much blather, but, in fact, the constitutional rules of the game, coupled with current parliamentary arithmetic and political atmosphere, leave him little room to maneuver.

Since Turkey went to direct election of the president based on a 2007 constitutional amendment, prior to which the president was elected by Parliament the president has been limited to two terms. Erdogan, during his first term, surprisingly left that measure intact when he proposed a vast set of constitutional amendments to enhance presidential powers in 2017. He nevertheless argued that establishment of a new system, even under the framework of the old constitution, entitled him to a fresh two terms, and the opposition (oddly) did little to contest that argument. Now, as he serves his third term, by any measure he is legally in his second and final term.

The constitution does provide one avenue for a president in his final term to serve an additional term: If Parliament votes for early elections with a 60% majority, a president in his final term can run for an additional, and truly final, term. However, it is unlikely that Erdogan would be able to muster such a parliamentary majority. His AKP has 265 seats in the 600-seat Parliament. With his partners MHP and other smaller parties, he holds 319 seats, well short of the 360 seats he would need for 60%. Theoretically, he could woo the additional support from other right-wing parties currently in the opposition, but it seems unlikely, given their current strong opposition to him. The results of the March local elections, as well as the 2023 presidential elections, suggest that Erdogan fatigue has taken hold in the Turkish body politic; parties already ill-disposed toward Erdogan would likely be wary of hitching their wagons to him and gifting him eligibility for an additional term.

In addition, Erdogan is now 70 and has ruled Turkey for over two decades. His campaigning during the local elections was noticeably less spirited than in past campaigns. He may not welcome the prospect of yet another campaign. And, of course, based on the trend of recent Turkish elections, he would have to wonder if, in the event he did run, he could, in fact, win another term. Its not impossible, but it seems like a steep uphill climb at this point.

Erdogan will likely want to embark on initiatives that will relegate his local election defeat to the back pages of memory as soon as possible. The realm most susceptible to a quick change of subject is certainly foreign affairs. He is reportedly scheduled to visit the White House May 9 a long-sought, first-ever invitation from President Joseph R. Biden Jr. and perhaps part of a deal by which Erdogan agreed to support ratification of Swedens NATO bid. That visit would be a reminder to Turks that Erdogan remains Turkeys international face and key decision maker. No doubt other meetings with regional or international leaders will precede that encounter, possibly even including a frequently postponed visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

A more dramatic action in the realm of foreign affairs is certainly also possible. Among the possibilities is significantly stepped-up military action against the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in Iraq; in March senior Iraqi and Turkish officials issued a joint statement suggesting cooperation in that regard. A cutback in trade with Israel is already in the works. (Islamist YRP attacked AKP not only for its economic failures but also for not being tough enough on Israel.) As Erdogan has recently tried to calm the waters with the United States, a major attack on the Syrian Democratic Forces in Syria and a major stirring up of tension in the Aegean is unlikely. Rapprochement efforts with Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates are likely to remain on course out of economic necessity, if for no other reason.

On the domestic front, Erdogan will continue to push for a new constitution, perhaps to extend his presidency. On that score, he would again encounter the problematic need for 60% of Parliament just to bring about a referendum of uncertain result. Speculation that Erdogan will seek a return to a parliamentary system to try to maintain his grip on power is probably far-fetched but cannot be entirely dismissed.

Erdogan will exploit his formal authorities to try to reinforce his leadership dominance in Turkey, but his power is no longer seen as unassailable, and he likely will not be able to mobilize his base as he once did. Moreover, he is likely increasingly to be seen as a lame duck, although many will continue to believe that he will find ways to hold onto his office. To have a chance to recoup his undefinable but very real losses, at a minimum he will have to put Turkeys crippled economy back on its feet, and that, if it happens, will take time.

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Erdogan Politically Wounded But Still Turkey's Dominant Power - Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington

Erdogans foreign policy: Continuity amid electoral setback and global engagements – Kathimerini English Edition

Turkish President and leader of the Justice and Development Party, or AKP, Recep Tayyip Erdogan gives a speech during a campaign rally ahead of nationwide municipality elections, in Istanbul, March 24. [AP]

There is talk of a new era in Turkish politics. Following the recent local elections, all sides agree that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is the big loser. With Turkeys economic challenges the paramount concern, foreign policy played a marginal role in the electoral discourse. Remarkably, amid the multitude of analyses, the foreign policy implications of the election outcome are scarcely addressed.

Upon closer scrutiny, two discernible trends come to light. One school of thought proposes that Erdogan, now weakened domestically, could regain lost trust on the far nationalist right of the political spectrum by employing radical nationalist rhetoric a tactic he has deftly utilized in the past by instrumentalizing foreign policy to mobilize voters.

An alternate interpretation posits that the Turkish presidents foreign policy decisions transcend mere domestic calculations. Following last years parliamentary and presidential elections, Ankara embarked on a strategic realignment aimed at repairing relations with neighboring countries. The Greek-Turkish detente is one example of this shift. There is much to suggest that Erdogan will stick to this line.

Looking ahead, Erdogans agenda is underpinned by two dominant objectives: revitalizing the ailing economy and positioning Turkey (and himself) as a key player in global geopolitics. Erdogans aspiration to engage on an equal footing with world leaders reflects a desire to have a say in critical international issues.

Crucially, economic recovery and geostrategic advancement are interlinked. Both goals are not compatible with a foreign policy that as we have seen in recent years has led Turkey into isolation.

In the forthcoming weeks and months, Erdogans diplomatic engagements will be in the international spotlight more than once. Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi is expected to pay an official visit to Ankara at the end of next week. Sisi is returning Erdogans visit to Cairo last February. Ankaras new relationship with the most populous Arab country has the potential to change the geostrategic map in the Eastern Mediterranean.

A trip to Baghdad is on the Turkish presidents agenda shortly afterward. Erdogan wants to establish a common front against the Kurdish PKK with the Iraqi government.

Barely back from the neighboring country, Erdogan is expected to welcome Vladimir Putin on his repeatedly postponed visit to Turkey, according to Turkish media. The war in Ukraine elevates the Russian-Turkish summit to an event of foremost geopolitical importance. One of the very few politicians of rank with working relations with both warring parties, Erdogan will once again offer himself as a mediator.

The visit by German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier to Ankara, planned for the end of April, has a high political symbolic value, even if it is more a matter of protocol. Still, improved relations between Ankara and Berlin may herald new progress in Turkeys relations with the European Union.

The culmination of Ankaras diplomatic overtures will undoubtedly be Erdogans visit to the White House on May 9, which has now been officially confirmed by both sides. It will be the first time that President Joe Biden receives the Turkish president at the White House a special diplomatic treat seen also as a reward for Ankaras ratification of Swedens accession to NATO.

In Washington, President Erdogan will engage in negotiations regarding the financial aspects of acquiring F-16 fighter jets for the Turkish Air Force, while also seeking an acceleration of their delivery. Additionally, he will offer Turkeys mediation efforts in the conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine.

Erdogans success in presenting these proposals in Washington hinges on his ability to adopt a cooperative and constructive stance. Of particular importance to American interests is Turkeys behavior toward Greece. The recent improvement in Turkeys relations with the West and the US coincides with a reduction in tensions between Athens and Ankara.

A significant upcoming event in this diplomatic process will be the scheduled visit of Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis to Turkey in May. Its noteworthy that the upcoming Greek-Turkish summit was arranged well before the Turkish local elections. Erdogans defeat in these elections is inconsequential to Turkish foreign policy and, consequently, will not impact the trajectory of Greek-Turkish relations.

Dr Ronald Meinardus is a senior research fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP).

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Erdogans foreign policy: Continuity amid electoral setback and global engagements - Kathimerini English Edition

A Turkey of an Election for Erdogan: AKP losses, CHP wins, and mamolu’s rising star – The New Arab

The recent local elections in Turkey did not go to plan for President Erdogan.

The voters sent a clear message to the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) party and the strongman president, when they voted in unprecedented numbers for the oppositionRepublican People's Party (CHP).

The CHP took control of Turkey's biggest cities and also managed to make significant headway into provinces that had been traditional AKP territory.

Additionally, the AKP also lost out to the NewWelfare Party (YRP), and Islamist party, who collected former AKP voters, who were angered by Erdogan's Gaza policy.

The recent vote raises some big questions about the future of Turkey and Erdogan.

This week on The New Arab Voice, we look at the recent Turkish elections. Why did the AKP and Erdogan do so badly? How big was the CHP victory? Has the path been set forEkremmamolu to rise to the presidency? Can and will Erdogan run again? Will Erdogan start another crackdown? And what is the state of Turkish democracy?

Joining us this week, we speak withGnl Tol (@gonultol),the founding director of the Middle East Institutes (@MiddleEastInst) Turkey programmeand a senior fellow with the Black Sea Program. Gnl's new book,Erdogan's War: A Strongman's Struggle at Home and in Syria, is out now.

Also, Soner Cagaptay (@SonerCagaptay), the Beyer Family Senior Fellow and director of theTurkish Research Programat The Washington Institute for Near East Policy (@WashInstitute), and the author of A Sultan in Autumn.

his podcast is written and produced by Hugo Goodridge (@hugogoodridge).

Theme music by Omar al-Fil.

To get in touch with the producers, follow then tweet us at@TNAPodcastsor emailpodcast@newarab.com

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A Turkey of an Election for Erdogan: AKP losses, CHP wins, and mamolu's rising star - The New Arab

Finn McRedmond: Nothing is new under the sun: the solar eclipse became the latest shiny object in the culture wars – The Irish Times

Herodotus writing in the 5th century BC contended more than once that a solar eclipse changed the entire course of history. First, the Medes and the Lydians were encouraged to broker a peace treaty under an inauspiciously darkened sky; and again, the Persian general Xerxes took an eclipse as a good omen for his planned invasion of Athens. The New Testament says the sky turned dark as Jesus was crucified. The Aztecs believed eclipses were a warning shot from the jaguar god; the Incas, meanwhile, were terribly concerned about the wrath of their own sun god.

If we think we have progressed past such primitive attempts to rationalise and understand the stars, we are very wrong. Mondays eclipse displayed no more intellectual sophistication than our Persian forebears, no more cool-headed rationality. In fact, there was perhaps no greater reminder of human atavism than Americans gathering outside to stare at the sky. The eclipse is as compelling to us now as it always has been and so, naturally, it quickly became a point of politics, a vehicle for the culture wars, a contemporary example of our base instinct for mythology.

The last total solar eclipse before Mondays happened on August 21st, 2017. Donald Trump and his wife Melania stood outside the White House to watch. Against the advice of all medical experts Trump looked up, pointed his finger, and stared directly into the sun. It was a humanising moment for those of us who know they couldnt resist the threat of a burned retina out of primal curiosity. But, more than that, it was a political statement.

Donald Trump looks up at the solar eclipse of August 21st, 2017 from a balcony in the White House. Photograph: Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Meanwhile, this week Joe Biden took a different approach. In a clip shared on social media, Biden is standing in the same spot where Trump and Melania stood seven years ago, but he is wearing protective eclipse goggles. An eclipse is worth marvelling at. But dont be silly, folks play it safe and wear protective eyewear, the post read. It immediately and purposefully conjures 2017 Trump.

In the middle of the pandemic Hillary Clinton used the same image of a squinting Trump. Please do not take medical advice from a man who looked directly at a solar eclipse, she said. And so the eclipse (both in 2017 and now) became no mere celestial event but a symbol of moral fortitude, a lesson on how to vote, a display of values, an augury for Covid-19. Xerxes looking to the sun for advice on when to attack Athens made him no fool. Humans havent changed.

Trump foolishly peering at the sun strikes a rather different figure to Bidens dorky public safety announcement. It is perfect shorthand for the Trump voter: one mans virility versus anothers frailty. For the Democrat, it is a clear display of the wanton recklessness of Trump versus the cautious sense of Biden. It doesnt really matter which interpretation is closer to the truth. The contrasting images are just a simple metaphor, ready to be warped into the shape of long-held prejudice, ready to be adopted as a symbol for something that extends far beyond the realm of astronomy. Which politician can be trusted? When should we invade Athens?

[Great American eclipse was, like, wooaahhh, writes Keith Duggan ]

I used to think mistakenly that these kinds of culture wars were a distraction from the substance of real politics; that serious minded people did not get caught up in the frivolities of things like the colour of a passport, the alleged race politics of Harry Potter, Joe Rogan and Russell Brand. I thought these things were deliberate ploys to divert attention from important matters of trade policy and infrastructure spending. I thought things could somehow fall victim to the culture wars. Mea culpa.

I have since come to realise via a rather robust correction afforded to me by the historian Dominic Sandbrook that this was wrong. Culture wars are no distraction from the substance of politics they are the substance of politics, he argues. The eclipse was neat evidence of this fact as it became a metaphor far more powerful and captivating than any taxation manifesto could ever aspire to be, as it revealed our culture-war instincts are as ancient as the Persians.

If anything should have disabused us of the idea that there is no meaningful distinction between culture and politics, perhaps it is the pandemic. Follow the science was an adage as much about political allegiance as any statement of policy. Mask-wearing in the US is still a dividing force between certain coastal liberal elites and the rest of the country. Lockdown policy was as much a reflection of a countrys values as anything else Jacinda Arderns New Zealand versus Boris Johnsons Britain a stark example of this fact.

Grand narratives of history too often focus on all the ways humanity has progressed but just as interesting is all the ways we do not change. The lure of mythology is a perfect example: astrology, organised religion, Republicanism, belief in national foundation stories, the flag, the monarchy. And the eclipse now is no different, not just in its ancient appeal but in its lessons: how to vote in November 2024; whether to wear a mask indoors; whether to broker a peace deal with the Medes.

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Finn McRedmond: Nothing is new under the sun: the solar eclipse became the latest shiny object in the culture wars - The Irish Times