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PoliticsTurkey

'Turning point' for Erdogan's Turkey: How the opposition won

April 1, 2024

Turkey's economic woes are the reason why so many voters turned against long-sitting President Erdogan, experts say.

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Istanbul's mayor and main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP) candidate Ekrem Imamoglu waves in front of supporters
Istanbul's popular mayor and CHP member, Ekrem Imamoglu, is now seen as Erdogan's main competition in the 2028 electionsImage: OZAN KOSE/AFP

Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan set himself a specific goal in the local elections that took place over the Easter weekend. He wanted his party, the conservative, Islamic-oriented Justice and Development Party, or AKP,  to win back the capital cities that they had lost to opposition politicians back in 2019.

But things did not work out according to that plan. In fact, the AKP did not win back the majority in Turkey's major cities and it also lost support in smaller provincial capitals, mostly to its main opposition, the center-left Republican People's Party, or CHP.

According to preliminary figures, with nearly all ballots counted, the CHP got 37.76% of the vote nationwide.

In 21 smaller cities and 14 larger ones — including Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Bursa, Adana and Antalya — the CHP prevailed. 

The local elections were seen as something of an opinion poll on Erdogan's current rule. The Turkish leader, who is more accustomed to victory, clearly felt the bad mood that Turkish voters are in. The AKP managed 35.48% of the vote nationwide. For the first time in the AKP's history, it was only the second-most popular party in the country.

Turkey's opposition makes huge gains in local elections

Turkey's economic problems to blame for AKP losses

Late on Sunday evening, Erdogan, 70, spoke to his supporters but he was different from his usual ebullient self and the crowd was unusually subdued. Erdogan praised the Turkish elections as a good sign for Turkish democracy and he did not threaten the opposition.

"Unfortunately, we have not obtained the results that we wanted," Erdogan told the crowd at AKP headquarters in Ankara. "We will of course respect the decision of the nation."

There would be a critical appraisal of the defeat, he added, noting that this was not the end for the AKP. Instead it would be a "turning point."

Turkey has been suffering as a result of Erdogan's economic policies for several years now, including his insistence on low interest rates. Despite tax increases and other tightening measures, the government has not been able to get a grip on high inflation and the loss of consumers' purchasing power as a result. That meant that the state of the economy played a major role in electoral campaigning.

"It was precisely the tense economic situation that was decisive for the AKP's poor performance," said Salim Cevik, Turkey expert at the Berlin-based German Institute for International and Security Affairs, or SWP.

During campaigns for parliamentary and presidential elections a year ago, Erdogan handed out a lot of sweeteners, including to pensioners and low-income earners.

"This time, with empty state coffers, he couldn't afford it," Cevik told DW, "which led to defeat."

Turkish President and Leader of Justice and Development (AK) Party Recep Tayyip Erdogan addresses the public .
Speaking to supporters after voting ended, Erdogan seemed subduedImage: Emin Sansar/Anadolu/picture alliance

All eyes on Istanbul

In order to win back Istanbul from the opposition, the Turkish president had even led election campaigning himself, rushing from event to event over the last few months. He also dispatched 17 ministers to do the same all over the country. They were not on the ballot but acted as though they were.

Erdogan was most worried about Istanbul, a city of 16 million. The city is home to 20% of all employees in the county, and more than half of the country's exports and imports are handled there. Altogether Istanbul, Ankara and the cities of Izmir, Adana, Antalya and Mugla account for almost half of Turkey's economic output.

Istanbul is also a meaningful symbol for the Turkish leader. He was mayor of the city from 1994 to 1998 and he himself said during those years that whoever wins Istanbul, wins the whole country.

No stopping the CHP

Still, despite mobilizing the entire state apparatus, the incumbent government didn't succeed in stopping the opposition. In the three most important cities — Ankara, Istanbul, Izmir — the CHP has a large lead, according to preliminary numbers. In Izmir, they lead by 10%, in Istanbul by 11% and in Ankara, by around a whopping 28%.

In Istanbul the city's popular mayor and CHP member, Ekrem Imamoglu, will remain in his seat.

The election "marks the end of democratic erosion in Turkey and the resurgence of democracy. Istanbul won," Imamoglu told supporters.

Observers say that the mayor's victory increase the chances of Imamoglu positioning himself as Erdogan's main challenger at the next presidential elections, due to be held in four years.

"This is Imamoglu's victory," Emre Erdogan, a professor of political science at Bilgi University in Istanbul, said. Turkey is politically divided and Imamoglu has managed to appeal to both the voters of the ultra-nationalist IYI party and those of the pro-Kurdish DEM party (formerly HDP).

"Now both he and the mayor of Ankara, Mansur Yavas, can be considered potential presidential candidates," Erdogan noted.

People celebrate early results pointing to a victory for Ekrem Imamoglu, Istanbul's mayor, in the streets. Turkish flags and red flares are visible .
Supporters of the opposition CHP party celebrated late into the nightImage: Chris McGrath/Getty Images

Not the end for AKP

However the academic doesn't think this is the political end of the AKP. The ruling party still has a lot of seats on local councils and President Erdogan has until the next elections in 2028 to consolidate his base.

Imamoglu does pose a danger though, analysts agree. Just like the current president, the 52-year-old mayor originally comes from the more conservative Black Sea region. He too has attended Koran lessons and, just like Erdogan, he places great emphasis on state mega-projects. He can mobilize voters and he is also considered to be charismatic, authentic and ambitious.

This is why he's an option for many urban Islamic conservatives and Turkish nationalists. He's not a deliberately polarizing figure either and would therefore also be an acceptable candidate for many Turkish Kurds in the cities.

According to the SWP's Cevik, there is also another winner emerging after these local elections and that is the New Welfare Party, headed by Fatih Erbakan, the son of the founder of political Islam in Turkey, Necmettin Erbakan.

The father is considered one of the country's most influential Turkish politicians of the 20th century. Anti-secular and anti-Western, he founded the Milli Gorus (or "National Vision") movement in 1969 with the goal of transforming Turkey into an Islamic state and moving it away from Europe and towards other Muslim countries.

The movement is " under observation" by Germany's domestic intelligence agency, the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution because, although not illegal, it espouses Islamist views. 

In this election, Fatih Erbakan's conservative and Islamist New Welfare Party did not form an alliance with Erdogan, fielding its own candidates instead. The party won mayoral seats in two cities and quite likely took votes from the AKP in doing so.

"As soon as an alternative to the AKP emerges on the conservative-nationalist spectrum, Erdogan's room for maneuver will become narrower," Cevik explained.

It's quite likely that Erdogan will try to tie the New Welfare Party more closely to his AKP party in the future. But for that to happen, the Turkish president would likely have to make many concessions.

This story was originally published in German. 

Elmas Topcu, sitting next to a bookcase full of books
Elmas Topcu Stories on Turkey, German-Turkish relations and political and religious groups linked to Turkey.@topcuelmas