HomeNewsOpinionTurkey’s Erdogan is down, but don’t count him out

Turkey’s Erdogan is down, but don’t count him out

The election upset of President Erdogan’s AK Party is just the start in a long fight for liberal democracy

April 02, 2024 / 15:25 IST
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Recep Tayyip Erdogan
Recep Tayyip Erdogan knew that some kind of political reckoning was coming and he planned for it.

This weekend’s election results in Turkey were astonishing, celebrated by hundreds of thousands of Turks as a victory for secularism, and by Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu as a revival of liberal democracy that offers hope not just to his country, but across the world. Eventually, perhaps. This marks the beginning of a fight by opponents of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, not its triumph.

Let’s start with the reasons for hope, because for anyone who has believed in the extraordinary promise of a democratic and open Turkey, the last decade has been unremittingly dark. What this weekend’s municipal elections have proved is that even for the most successful populist leaders, the power of identity politics can be insufficient if they destroy the economy.

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The mismanagement was especially clear in Erdogan’s case, because he wore his personal responsibility for disastrous monetary policies as a badge of honor. His belief — against all advice and evidence — that cutting interest rates would reduce, rather than increase, inflation proved catastrophic.

Meanwhile, Imamoglu’s Republican People’s Party polled better than even its leaders expected. Known as the CHP, the party of Turkey’s founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk amassed more votes nationwide than the ruling Justice and Development Party, or AKP, for the first time since Erdogan took power more than 20 years ago. The CHP also secured control over many more towns and cities. Even Turkey’s president seemed humbled by the rout.