THE WASHINGTON INSTITUTE FOR NEAR EAST POLICY
April 19, 2023
Turkey's Pivotal 2023 Elections
Issues, Potential Outcomes, and What Comes After
Edited by Soner Cagaptay
by Soner Cagaptay
Apr 19, 2023
Candidates Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Kemal Kilicdarolgu, May 2023 Turkish elections
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Soner Cagaptay
Soner Cagaptay is the Beyer Family fellow and director of the Turkish Research Program at The Washington Institute.
In-Depth Reports
Opinion polls offer hope for the challengers, but Erdogan's media control and other factors could foil their efforts to finally topple the president and his ruling bloc.
On May 14, Turkey’s citizens will cast their ballots for president and parliament, and polls suggest the longtime incumbent could actually lose this time. President Erdogan’s challenger, Republican People’s Party head Kemal Kilicdaroglu, has assembled an ideologically diverse coalition united in its determination to oust the ruling bloc. Guiding the opposition, known popularly as the “Table of Six,” is a message focused on restoring competence amid sky-high inflation and a faltering response to the devastating February earthquakes. But Erdogan’s challengers still face headwinds created in part by his near-complete control of the media.
In this Policy Note compilation, Turkey expert Soner Cagaptay and his fellow contributors concur that Erdogan will use polarizing tactics to keep power, whatever the results of the May 14 balloting or a possible May 28 presidential runoff. They also assess how various wild card developments—including the entry of spoiler candidate Muharrem Ince and meddling from Russia—could aid the Turkish leader in unforeseen ways.
Introduction
Soner Cagaptay
On May 14, Turkey’s citizens will cast their ballots for both president and
parliament in undoubtedly the most critical contests since the country’s first
free and fair elections in 1950. The outcome of possibly the country’s last
competitive vote under President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will shape Turkey’s
domestic politics and foreign policy for years to come.
Opinion surveys show a neck-and-neck race between two main blocs:
Erdogan’s People’s Alliance—comprising his conservative Justice and
Development Party (AKP), the allied ultra-Turkish-nationalist Nationalist
Action Party (MHP), and a number of smaller, mostly far-right parties—and
the six-party opposition, led by the leftist, social democratic Republican
People’s Party (CHP) and its longtime leader Kemal
Kilicdaroglu. The CHP is joined in the Nation’s
Alliance by a diverse coalition, including the
centrist Democracy and Progress Party (DEVA), the
center-right Democrat Party (DP), the nationalist,
center-right Good Party (IYI)—the only other major
faction besides the CHP—the conservative Future
Party (Gelecek; GP), and the political Islamist Felicity
Party (Saadet; FP). Also known as the “Table of Six,”
the Nation’s Alliance poses the greatest challenge
to Erdogan in nationwide elections since his AKP
triumphed in November 2002. A third electoral bloc,
led by the liberal, pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic
Party (HDP)—and accompanied by leftist and far-leftist
parties—is informally backing Kilicdaroglu in the presidential
race, while separately competing for seats in parliament.
More than sixty million voters are qualified to cast
ballots in the May elections, and turnout in Turkey
usually ranges between 80 and 90 percent of registered
voters. This means more than fifty million Turkish citizens
will vote on May 14. While the parliament’s seat distribution
will be finalized that day, if no presidential candidate wins 50 percent, a
runoff between the top two candidates will be held
two weeks later, on May 28. Elections in Turkey
have been largely unfair since the switch to an
executive-style presidential system in 2018, exacerbated
by Erdogan’s growing control over media and
Turkish institutions, but the vote does remain free.
Moreover, elections matter in Turkey for the broader
electorate—including Erdogan’s base—as a source
of legitimacy rooted in decades of democracy and
collective public memory of this tradition.
Regardless of the angle one takes, the May polls will
be a watershed: either Erdogan will lose and step
aside after two decades of rule, or he will remain at
the helm so long as he is alive, folding the country’s
remaining independent institutions under his
control. An Erdogan win would likewise probably
signal the end of competitive elections in the country,
with the opposition losing any hope of voting him out
and educated voters and elites potentially fleeing the
country in droves—all with major ramifications for
Turkey’s democracy and foreign policy orientation.
Abbreviations
AKP Justice and Development Party
CHP Republican People’s Party
DEVA Democracy and Progress Party
DP Democrat Party
GP Future Party (Gelecek)
HDP Peoples’ Democratic Party
HUDA-PAR Free Cause Party
IYI Good Party
MHP Nationalist Action Party
OSCE Organization for Security and
Cooperation
PKK Kurdistan Workers Party
SP Felicity Party
YPG People’s Defense Units
YRP New Welfare Party
YSK Supreme Election Council
YSP Green Left Party
CONTENTS
Erdogan’s Multifaceted Election Strategy 3
Ragip Soylu
The Opposition’s Strategy 8
Seren Selvin Korkmaz
Potential Outcomes for the Kurdish Vote 12
Guney Yildiz
The Foreign Policy Angle 16
Alper Coskun
How Turkey Might Look After the Polls 20
Soner Cagaptay
Conclusion: Defending the Vote and Turkish
Democracy 22
Soner Cagaptay
COVER PHOTOS: MURAT CETINMUHURDAR/PPO VIA REUTERS (LEFT); ALP EREN KAYA/CHP VIA REUTERS
CAGAPTAY
POLICY NOTE 132 3
TURKEY’S PIVOTAL 2023 ELECTIONS
Of the countries between Germany and India, Turkey
has the oldest democracy and one of the largest
economies. The results of the May elections will
undoubtedly resonate beyond the country’s borders,
and the days surrounding the vote will be fateful,
especially if the presidential contest goes to a runoff.
Erdogan has distinguished himself as an innovator of
nativist-populist politics in the twenty-first century,
and he has remained an attentive student of this
political trend globally. Should the race enter a runoff,
Erdogan is sure to engage in polarizing tactics to
broaden his base, recognizing the humiliation that a
loss would entail. Yet the stakes are equally high for
the opposition and the veteran Kilicdaroglu. A loss
would certainly doom the CHP leader’s political future
and shatter any prospects for his six-party coalition.
In the following set of essays, experts on Turkey
scrutinize the forthcoming vote through various
lenses. Ragip Soylu dissects Erdogan’s electoral
strategy (gentle but full of surprises), and Seren
Selvin Korkmaz analyzes the opposition’s strategy
(trying to stay unified and avoid culture wars with
Erdogan). Thereafter, Guney Yildiz sorts out the
complex, evolving Kurdish vote (kingmaker of the
elections), and Alper Coskun discusses Ankara’s
foreign policy trajectories under the opposition
vis-à-vis more of Erdogan (transatlantic leaning vs.
coldly transactional). The volume will end with this
author’s analysis on what elections hold for Turkey
and the world, including policy suggestions for the
U.S. government during and immediately after the
elections.
Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan is facing
one of his toughest election fights since coming to
power twenty years ago. In seeking his second term
under the executive presidential system established
in 2018, he is fending off the Nation’s Alliance (aka
“Table of Six”), a united bloc determined to defeat
him. The challenges of incumbency include a deep
economic crisis, with inflation reaching as high as
85 percent, and historic earthquakes that killed more
than 50,000 Turkish residents.
But Erdogan has a game plan, and since August 2022
he and his ruling Justice and Development Party
(AKP) have been busy creating and implementing a
strategy. As a result, January 2023 polling indicated
that his coalition’s numbers had jumped by more
than six percentage points since a survey taken
the previous June.
1 The recent entry of Republican
People’s Party (CHP) defector Muharrem Ince into
the race as a third-party candidate could further
boost the incumbent.
2 While Erdogan’s coalition will struggle to break
the 45 percent barrier, let alone the
50 percent needed to win the presidency in round
one on May 14, Ince’s rise could deny Kilicdaroglu
an outright initial victory, forcing a runoff between
Erdogan and Kilicdaroglu on May 28.
A Four-Pronged Strategy
Prior to the February earthquakes, Erdogan’s strategy
rested on three pillars, and he later added a fourth.
1. Use foreign policy to boost domestic popularity. In pursuit of this goal, Erdogan has repaired damaged relations with Arab heavyweights over the
past couple of years. One result was that, in 2021, the
United Arab Emirates agreed to a $5 billion currency
swap with Ankara and pledged to invest $10 billion
in Turkey’s start-ups and high-tech industry.3 Dubai
also purchased hundreds of millions of dollars’
worth of drones from Ankara.4 Saudi Arabia deposited $5 billion
in the Turkish Central Bank in March 2023 after Erdogan dropped
the court case over the 2018 Istanbul murder of Saudi journalist
Jamal Khashoggi,5 and Riyadh is poised to both make arms.
Erdogan’s Multifaceted Election Strategy
Ragip Soylu
purchases from Ankara and pursue investment
opportunities.
Erdogan successfully secured a needed cash injection from
Russia, amounting to nearly $10 billion,
through the Akkuyu nuclear power plant construction
project.6 He has simultaneously kept the country
open to Russians fleeing their country. Together with
booming two-way trade with Russia, these steps have
allowed likely billions of dollars to flow to Turkey.7
Such moves have helped finance the president’s
unorthodox policy centered on low interest rates and
a controlled foreign exchange regime, whereby the
Turkish Central Bank burns its reserves to stabilize
the Turkish lira against the U.S. dollar and other
currencies. The strategy so far has kept the lira under
control, backing up Erdogan’s economic claims,
while also allowing him to conduct a populist spending
spree (detailed below).
Simultaneously, Erdogan has been working on
outreach to Syrian president Bashar al-Assad
through Russian mediation since last August.
Along with the economy, the anti–Syrian refugee
sentiments of Turkish voters continue to be a top
election issue.8 The president has been under fire
for allowing nearly 4 million Syrian refugees into
the country throughout his rule, and mindful of the
opposition’s promises “to send the refugees back by
cutting a deal with Assad,”9 Erdogan started his own
engagement with Damascus, first through intelligence
channels, then through the Foreign Ministry.
He has already said he would like to meet with Assad
before the elections.10 The outreach itself has shown
voters Erdogan’s intention to match the opposition
in pursuing a deal with Assad to send some refugees
back to Syria.
2. Alleviate heavy price pressures through
economic relief. Recognizing that more than 50
percent of the Turkish public earns the minimum
wage, in January 2023 Erdogan doubled this rate for
the private sector from the previous January, bringing
it to US$443 a month.11 He implemented a similar raise
for the public sector that affected around five million
employees. In addition, the government
passed an early retirement package that allowed
two million Turkish workers to retire immediately;
launched a cheap mortgage loan scheme for citizens
who do not own their own home; and provided tax
debt relief to millions. Erdogan has secured permanent
positions for nearly one-half million subcontractors in
the public sector and created a new scheme to give a
30–50 percent raise to the country’s 1.3
million health workers. Such moves likely contributed
to the earlier-noted polling bump for Erdogan’s bloc
from summer 2022 to early 2023.
3. Focus on the future. To achieve his optimistic
election strategy, Erdogan has tapped as campaign
manager Ertan Aydin—a political scientist, pollster,
and former AKP parliamentarian who correctly
forecast the AKP’s 2019 mayoral losses in Istanbul
and Ankara. Aydin has been running a campaign
focused on Turkey’s centennial and has created
the “Turkey century” concept; in turn, Erdogan has
tactically called on the opposition to join him in
producing creative ideas to build the republic’s next
hundred years.
Erdogan invited opposition representatives and
his media critics to the event held to promote this
concept, calling on them to acknowledge all his
government has done in the service of Turkish
society.12 He then put his political challengers on the
spot, asking them to present their own proposals.
Ertan’s team has focused on promoting the Turkey
century concept by spotlighting Erdogan’s national
projects, with an emphasis on major projects
such as highways, dams, factories, and a revived
defense industry—military fighter jets and drones in
particular.13
Erdogan also wants to individually spotlight other
endeavors, such as the Turkish national electric car
project (TOGG, Turkiye’nin Otomobili Girisim Grubu),
whose first car is expected to be on the road before
the elections. Turkish shipbuilders have already
delivered the light aircraft carrier TCG Anadolu,
which will be launched before the elections as
well. Furthermore, the Turkish president plans to
inaugurate a pipeline that will carry Turkey’s own
Black Sea gas to households in April, and he has
already inaugurated a factory that produces boron
carbide, a mineral with multiple military-industrial
uses, of which Turkey holds 70 percent of worldwide
reserves.
In March, Erdogan also signaled a possible change
in his unpopular and unorthodox monetary policy
by inviting Mehmet Simsek, the respected former
finance minister, back into the party as a parliamentary
candidate for the elections. An AKP official said
that Erdogan had assigned former finance minister
Lutfi Elvan, known for his market-friendly monetary
policy, to write the AKP’s election manifesto.14 All
these moves suggest Erdogan is also looking for ways
to address the public disappointment and consternation
reflected in global markets caused by his unorthodox
economic policies.
Furthermore, he added the Islamist-oriented New
Welfare Party (YRP) to his electoral alliance in March
to boost his prospects. The YRP and other right-wing
and far-right smaller parties that Erdogan has since
welcomed, such as the Kurdish Islamist Free Cause
Party (HUDA-PAR), could boost the People’s Alliance
by around 3 percent in the presidential and parliamentary races.15
4. Eschew divisiveness. Erdogan has not won
successive elections over two decades by using softball
campaign tactics. But he recognizes this year,
after the February earthquakes leveled cities and
dispersed hundreds of thousands to tent cities, that
he should limit harsh language and bitter attacks.
One AKP official told the author that the campaign
will aim to promote the sum of Erdogan’s achievements
over the past twenty years, and specifically those in the last
year or so, to imply that the Table of Six cannot deliver the
same results.16
The official expected that, from time to time, Erdogan
would directly target opposition candidate Kilicdaroglu but
that his main focus would be on his achievements
and on the future. Another factor pointing to a
relatively positive tone is Ramadan, which lasts until
late April and generally does not lend itself to holding
large rallies.
Wild Cards: Kurdish Votes and Crackdowns
While Erdogan has a clear election strategy, two variables
could affect the outcome—the Kurdish vote and his own
impulsiveness. In an effort to win votes from religious Kurds,
Erdogan—as noted—added HUDAPAR to his coalition in
March, triggering considerable criticism from the opposition
due to the party’s past ties to “Turkish Hezbollah,”17 a
now-inactive radical Sunni Islamist Kurdish group that carried
out a bloody campaign in the 1990s. HUDA-PAR, however,
has since disavowed violence. What is more, the
party won just 0.3 percent in the 2018 elections.
According to officials close to Erdogan who spoke on
condition of anonymity, HUDA-PAR would play only a
symbolic role in convincing religiously conservative
Kurdish voters to remain within AKP ranks.18
Days before the 2019 mayoral elections, Erdogan
successfully pressured Abdullah Ocalan, the imprisoned
leader of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), to call on Turkey’s
Kurdish community to boycott the vote, a development that
would have dashed the opposition’s hopes given the Kurdish
population in big cities. Ocalan’s willingness to work with Erdogan
likely derived from his belief that he could negotiate
a deal with the president on the Kurdish question.
This strategy, however, failed to persuade supporters
of Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP)—the beneficiary
of nearly half of Turkey’s Kurdish votes19—largely
because many realized that Ocalan had issued his
call in response to government pressure. If Erdogan
feels truly desperate, he may again try to use Ocalan
to weaken the HDP and cause some Kurdish voters to
abandon the opposition.
Despite his advisors’ strategy of maintaining calm
during the election campaign, Erdogan might ultimately
follow his less temperate instincts and run a polarizing
campaign, especially after Ramadan ends on April 23.
Along these lines, some pro-Erdogan
media outlets and social media accounts have
already started making thinly veiled attacks against
Kilicdaroglu, suggesting he is not a good Muslim.20
As part of a preelection turn, Erdogan might crack
down harder on social media platforms, where
the opposition has a free hand to shape the public agenda.
Last, Erdogan will likely focus on continued
post-earthquake reconstruction and associated
services for constituents in the coming years. He is
confident that emergency conditions can help him
consolidate his image as a capable leader. Thus,
he will continue to employ campaign slogans that
showcase his promises to rebuild houses, hospitals,
schools, and industrial sites within a year, he and
will frequently visit disaster zones to solidify his standing.
AKP Game Plan for Election Rounds One and Two
People close to Erdogan expect that the presidential
election results will be very close, perhaps within
one or two percentage points.21 The opposition
appears united—with the exception of failed 2018
CHP presidential candidate Muharrem Ince, whose
independent candidacy will likely siphon votes from
the Nation’s Alliance. Ince, who has polled at around
5–10 percent,22 is likely to prevent Kilicdaroglu from
reaching the 50 percent threshold required to win in
the first round. Not surprisingly, some pro-Erdogan
media networks have given ample attention to Ince,
granting him more coverage than Kilicdaroglu and
helping boost his poll numbers.23
Should the presidential vote go to a May 28 runoff,
Erdogan will contour his strategy based on the
parliamentary results. If the AKP holds on to its
majority position, Erdogan will campaign on the
virtues of a united, experienced national leadership;
if his party loses its majority, he will argue that
an AKP presidency can balance an opposition-led
parliament. Party officials, for their part, believe
Erdogan can successfully appeal to voters in a
second round in either case.
If a runoff occurs, Erdogan may use a harsher style
and a campaign strategy that targets Kilicdaroglu in
personal terms, painting him as weak or immoral. He
would likely present the elections as a binary choice
between himself, a strong leader with a track record
of running the country, and Kilicdaroglu, a politician
who lacks any such experience. Erdogan can here
draw on his foreign policy and security credentials to
make his case.
Conveniently, the AKP has changed the election
laws, theoretically allowing the party to win more
legislative seats than it typically would based on
raw vote share, considering an ideologically divided
opposition.24 The opposition, however, has overcome
this hurdle at least in part by crafting—case by case—
either separate or joint lists for different election
districts across the country to maximize its gains at
the ballot box.
Erdogan, together with his ally the Nationalist Action
Party (MHP), has the steady support of roughly
42–45 percent of the electorate thanks to the
strategies described here. The earlier-noted entry of
Muharrem Ince into the race has produced another
boon. But the incumbent still faces an uphill battle
to exceed 45 percent or even win the presidency in
the first round. Erdogan’s lieutenants take comfort
in their view that the opposition will struggle to stay
united, given the cracks that appeared during the
Table of Six meeting on March 2, when party leaders
initially failed to pick a joint candidate.25 The president, ever
a shrewd campaigner, will no doubt keep looking to sow discord
within the opposition, even if he does so quietly.
Ragip Soylu is the Turkey bureau chief for Middle East Eye.
He previously served as a correspondent for the Turkish
media outlets Daily Sabah and ATV, based in Washington
DC and London.
1 Team Arastirma (@teamarastirma), post on Twitter, “
The possibility of the People’s Alliance winning the
parliamentary majority has strengthened...” (in Turkish),
January 21, 2023, 3:13 a.m., https://twitter.com/
teamarastirma/status/1616710488510930944?s=20.
2 Orhan Coskun and Daren Butler, “Breakaway Candidate
Could Give Erdogan a Lifeline in Tight Turkey Election,”
Reuters, April 4, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/
middle-east/breakaway-candidate-could-give-erdogan
lifeline-tight-turkey-election-2023-04-04/.
3 “UAE Establishes $10bn Fund to Support Turkey Investments
,” The National, November 24, 2021, https://www.
thenationalnews.com/uae/government/2021/11/24/uae-establishes-
10bn-fund-to-support-turkey-investments.
4 “Turkey and UAE Ink $5bn Currency Swap Deal,” Middle East Eye,
January 19, 2022, https://www.middleeasteye.
net/news/turkey-uae-ink-currency-swap-deal; “UAE to Invest $10bn
in Turkey After Landmark Visit,” Middle
East Eye, November 24, 2021, https://www.middleeasteye.net/news/
uae-turkey-boost-investment-landmarkvisit.
5 Reuters, “Saudi Arabia Deposits $5bln in Turkey’s Central Bank—
Statement,” March 6, 2023, https://www.reuters.
com/world/middle-east/saudi-arabia-deposits-5-bln-turkeys-
central-bank-statement-2023-03-06/.
6 Firat Kozok, “Russia Is Wiring Dollars to Turkey for $20 Billion
Nuclear Plant,” Bloomberg, July 29, 2022, https://
www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-07-29/russia-is-wiring-
dollars-to-turkey-for-20-billion-nuclear-plant.
7 Patrick Sykes, “Turkey Boasts of Russia Trade Boom, Defying Push
for Sanctions,” Bloomberg, August 12, 2022,
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-08-12/turkey-
boasts-of-russia-trade-boom-defying-push-forsanctions#
xj4y7vzkg.
8 Sude Akgundogdu, Turkish Backlash: How Street Interviews
Spread Anti–Syrian Refugee Sentiment (Washington DC:
Washington Institute, 2023), https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/
policy-analysis/turkish-backlash-how-streetinterviews-spread-
anti-syrian-refugee-sentiment.
9 “Turkey Presidential Candidate Vows to Deport Syrians in Two Years
if He Beats Erdogan,” New Arab, March 16,
2023, https://www.newarab.com/news/turkey-opposition-candidate-
vows-expel-syrians-2-years.
10 Umut Uras, “Erdogan Says He May Meet Syria’s Assad for ‘Peace’
in the Region,” Al Jazeera, January 5, 2023,
https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/1/5/syria-348.
11 Reuters, “Turkey Raises Monthly Minimum Wage by 55% for 2023,” December 22, 2022, https://www.reuters.
com/markets/turkey-raises-monthly-minimum-wage-by-50-2023-2022-12-22.
12 “‘Century of Turkiye’ Revolution to Bring Peace to the World,” Daily Sabah, October 28, 2022, https://www.
dailysabah.com/politics/elections/century-of-turkiye-revolution-to-bring-peace-to-world-erdogan.
13 See, e.g., Stephen Witt, “The Turkish Drone That Changed the Nature of Warfare,” The New Yorker, May 16, 2022,
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/05/16/the-turkish-drone-that-changed-the-nature-of-warfare?.
14 AKP official (anonymous), meeting with author in late March 2023, Ankara.
15 “The Latest Poll Results for the 2023 Elections: How Many Votes Do the Parties Get, How Many Votes Do the
Alliances Get” (in Turkish), EuroNews, March 31, 2023, https://tr.euronews.com/2023/03/10/2023-secimlerison-anket-sonuclari-partilerin-oy-orani-kac-ittifaklar-kac-oy-aliyor.
16 AKP official (anonymous no. 2), early March 2023, Ankara.
17 See “Turkish Hezbollah,” Military Periscope, https://www.militaryperiscope.com/militant-organizations/middleeast/turkish-hezbollah-0/.
18 Officials within Turkish state bureaucracy, several meetings with author, March 2023, Ankara.
19 Dogu Eroglu, “Research: Kurdish Support for AKP Declines, Gains for CHP” (in Turkish), Medyascope, March 26,
2022, https://medyascope.tv/2022/03/26/arastirma-kurtlerin-akpye-destegi-dusuyor-chp-oy-kazaniyor/.
20 See, e.g., Sabah (@Sabah), “Kemal Kilicdaroglu thought that the 81st verse of Isra Sura was a Necmettin
Erbakan quote...” (in Turkish), post on Twitter, April 3, 2023, 9:02 a.m., https://twitter.com/sabah/
8 T HE WAS HINGTON INS T I T U T E FOR NE A R E AS T P OL ICY
CAGAPTAY TURKEY’S PIVOTAL 2023 ELECTIONS
Polling suggests that President Recep Tayyip
Erdogan and his Justice and Development Party
(AKP) could lose in the May 2023 elections, resulting in a
seismic political shift in Turkey.1 A weak
economy, sky-high inflation, and poorly functioning
state institutions, as evidenced by the response to
the February earthquakes, have provided an opening
for the six-party opposition known as the Nation’s
Alliance, which is united under Republican People’s
Party (CHP) head Kemal Kilicdaroglu.
By building on its past successes and learning from
its failures, the opposition has honed a strategy that
delivered victories against Erdogan’s candidates in
the 2019 local elections. This approach, rooted in
a strong alliance model, includes a joint candidate
and a vision platform as well as a plan for countering
Erdogan’s polarizing politics.
This essay will examine the strategy espoused
by the opposition Nation’s Alliance—aka “Table of
Six”—and its prospects in the forthcoming presidential and
parliamentary elections, the outcome of which will determine
whether Turkey heads toward more-entrenched autocracy or
more-open democracy. If the opposition wins, it will pursue
redemocratization, potentially offering a playbook for
actors opposing similar types of populists elsewhere
around the world.
A Unified Bloc
In a competitive authoritarian government such as
Turkey’s, a unified opposition poses a real threat to
the incumbent. Typical of populist authoritarians,
Erdogan has benefited from fragmented politics and
intense polarization. Yet since the 2017 referendum
transformed Turkey into an executive presidential
system, the opposition has worked hard to build a
broad coalition and implemented numerous strategies
to counter Erdogan’s divisive rhetoric.
The opposition’s victories in the 2019 local elections,
taking major cities such as Istanbul and Ankara
from the AKP, has instilled hope in Turkey’s voters
committed to democracy and laid the groundwork
for larger coalitions. While divisions have sometimes
status/1642875236877062145; Amberin Zaman, “Will Turkish Opposition Leader’s Alevi Faith Be Hindrance at
Polls,” Al-Monitor, May 23, 2022, https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2022/05/will-turkish-opposition-leadersalevi-faith-be-hindrance-polls.
21 Meetings with Turkish state bureaucrats, March 2023.
22 See, e.g., “Ince Is 10 Percent, Kilicdaroglu Leads Erdogan, and HDP and IYI Votes Fell, While CHP Rose”
(in Turkish), Serbestiyet, March 21, 2023, https://serbestiyet.com/secim2023/ince-yuzde-10-kilicdarogluerdogandan-onde-hdp-ve-iyipin-oylari-dustu-chpnin-yukseldi-122492/.
23 “Ince Walks Thin Line as Kingmaker for Turkish Opposition Bloc,” Daily Sabah, March 30, 2023, https://www.
dailysabah.com/politics/elections/ince-walks-thin-line-as-kingmaker-for-turkish-opposition-bloc.
24 Peoples’ Democratic Party, “AKP-MHP Alliance Changes the Election Law According to Its Own Needs,” April 4,
2022, https://hdp.org.tr/en/akp-mhp-alliance-changes-the-election-law-according-to-its-own-needs/16283/.
25 Ezgi Akin, “Turkey’s Opposition Alliance Fractures, Fails to Agree on Challenger to Erdogan,” Al-Monitor, March
3, 2023, https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2023/03/turkeys-opposition-alliance-fractures-fails-agreechallenger-erdogan.
The Opposition’s Strategy
Seren Selvin Korkmaz
appeared in a diverse opposition encompassing
Turkish and Kurdish nationalists, secularists, and
political Islamists, among others, the singular goal
of defeating Erdogan has given them cause for unity,
considering the 50 percent plus 1 needed to win the
presidency. To this end, the six parties in the Nation’s
Alliance have set aside their differences and banded
together behind longtime Republican People’s Party
(CHP) leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu.
After meeting with Kilicdaroglu, the Labor and
Freedom Alliance—formed by pro-Kurdish Peoples’
Democratic Party (HDP) and other leftist parties and
platforms—announced that it would not field its own
presidential candidate, signaling implicit support for
the CHP leader.2 With its potential to win 10%–13%
of the vote, the Labor and Freedom Alliance move
could have a significant impact on the election
outcomes. In the presidential contest, it could help
Kilicdaroglu win in the first round. Despite the AKP’s
identity-based attempts at polarization, the Labor
and Freedom Alliance decision also could signal a
broader sociopolitical alliance for the future.
Team of Six vs. President
The opposition Nation’s Alliance is playing a team
game. Two popular mayors—Istanbul’s Ekrem
Imamoglu and Ankara’s Mansur Yavas—will be
appointed as vice presidents if the opposition wins.
Ali Babacan, who chairs the Democracy and Progress
Party (DEVA) and formerly was a foreign affairs and
economy minister in Erdogan’s governments, would
prospectively preside over the economy as another
vice president, wielding his strong international
reputation for financial management. The other
Nation’s Alliance leaders would hold vice presidential
posts as well in the event of a win.
After much internal debate, leaders agreed on
Kilicdaroglu’s candidacy on March 6, 2023. Despite
his low tallies in two-way matchups with Erdogan
relative to other front-runner prospects, including
Imamoglu and Yavas, Kilicdaroglu has—for the most
part—gained the trust of most fellow coalition party
elites. Even Turkey’s opposition is not immune to the
nation’s trend toward polarization, and the political
veteran Kilicdaroglu has a unique ability to communicate
with and unify different blocs. His success in persuading the
Labor and Freedom Alliance is a case in point.
Vision Platform
The six opposition parties, in addition to agreeing
on a common candidate, have coalesced around
a proactive, positive shared agenda—the “Vision
Platform”—which includes a commitment to restore
the country’s former parliamentary system and
advance democratic freedoms. To this end, the
parties have drafted three “vision” documents: (1)
an agreement for a strengthened parliamentary
system, (2) a constitutional amendment package
seeking this outcome, and (3) a memorandum of
understanding outlining common policies.3 Those
texts demonstrate that despite significant ideological
differences, the opposition parties are embracing
the country’s diverse reality, along with the need for
dialogue, negotiations, and reconciliation—rather
than polarization.
Unlike Erdogan’s presidential system, which has
enabled personalized power and the hollowing
out of institutions, the opposition’s “strengthened
parliamentary system” would seek to reinforce and
stabilize policymaking in Turkey. New safeguards,
including a series of checks and balances, would
be designed to prevent the rise of a “new Erdogan.”
The presidency, in the proposed model, would revert
to a more symbolic-diplomatic role characterized
by stability, transparency, and accountability. The
legislature would be structured as a more efficient,
participatory body. The judiciary would be impartial
and independent.
The opposition memorandum, which covers foreign
as well as domestic policy, calls for institutionalizing
relations with the United States and returning to
work on the F-35 project. (Following Turkey’s acquisition of Russia’s S-400 system, the Trump administration removed Turkey from the F-35 program
in July 2019.4) The alliance generally elevates
institutional roles over personalities in foreign policy,
and seeks stronger ties with Europe and America in
the context of the war in Ukraine. It also commits to
maintaining coequal relations with Russia, wherein
dialogue should be balanced and constructive at the
institutional level.
Inclusive Rhetoric
Historically, Erdogan has sought to divide the opposition
along historical and ideological fault lines, thus
ensuring that the ruling alliance gets the most votes.
For the opposition, delivering a message centered
on inclusivity amounts to a high-wire act—they must
satisfy their own voters while winning defectors from
Erdogan’s bloc—but this approach worked decisively
in the 2019 local elections. As a result, the Nation’s
Alliance has stuck with an inclusive tone and sought
to avoid polarizing rhetoric.
Kilicdaroglu has added forgiveness and reconciliation—
“helallesme”—to the notion of inclusivity,
with the aim of healing the country’s past wrongs,
committed against citizens since the founding of the
Turkish republic in 1923, mostly targeting devout
Muslims and Kurds. In practical terms, the opposition
has taken a pragmatic approach to problems
such as the struggling economy, thus steering away
from identity politics and simultaneously compelling
Erdogan to coopt his opponents’ proposals on urgent
economic issues.
Campaign in the Shadow of Ruin
The devastation of the February earthquakes has
engendered a subdued tone from both sides in the
campaign. President Erdogan has focused primarily
on immediate reconstruction projects to present
the image that he will ensure their continuity. His
government drew heavy criticism, however, for
failing to quickly mobilize rescue teams, coordinate
humanitarian aid, and repair critical infrastructure.
The opposition, for its part, has homed in on weakened
state institutions to explain the government’s
post-earthquake failures, in turn emphasizing its
own vision of strong, transparent, and capable
institutions that can address the daily problems of
displaced and otherwise affected residents.
Playing Field Tilts Toward Erdogan
As the opposition rallies behind Kilicdaroglu,
Erdogan will seek to regain advantage by using his
control of state resources and the media. Election
security likewise poses a challenge—especially in
earthquake-hit areas, where one-sixth of voters have
had to register and will cast ballots under emergency
conditions,5 requiring the opposition to both shoot
for a safe 4–5 point margin and mobilize all available
resources to secure the vote. Yet another challenge is
the politically motivated effort to shut down the HDP.6
Seeking to evade this risk, the HDP has decided to
run under the banner of the Green Left Party (YSP)
and will not nominate politicians who could face a
ban in parliament.7 Still, all in all, Erdogan enjoys
an uneven playing field, and will continue to deftly
manage expectations, intensify suppression of
dissenters, and employ a fear-based strategy that
portends “If I lose, you lose.” This is why he should
not be underestimated.
Postelection Scenarios for the Opposition
To be sure, the return to a Turkish parliamentary
system would go more smoothly if the opposition
won the presidency as well as the parliament
with a three-fifths majority—a prerequisite for a
constitutional amendment necessary to restore
the country’s former political system. But recent
election law changes make such a landslide victory
unlikely. At the time of writing, Kilicdaroglu was
leading the presidential race in the first round and
predicted to win a runoff, while the race for the
parliament appeared to be a toss-up. Two scenarios
could therefore emerge in May: (1) Given the wide
executive powers of the presidency under Turkey’s
new political system, Erdogan’s loss of his position
would be a huge blow for his party and base. Hence,
Erdogan may agree to negotiate with the incoming
leadership about reverting to a parliamentary system
in return for immunity from any charges against
him, his family members, and key people in his
administration. (2) Erdogan could also be preparing
to lose the presidency and, in doing so, to ensure
“parliamentary immunity” from potential charges
for his ministers. This scenario would appear to be
supported by recent developments, with Erdogan
having declared that fifteen of his current ministers
will run for the parliament. Erdogan could be planning
to cultivate a powerful opposition while in the
minority—a scenario applicable if he were to also lose
the parliament—composed of well-connected former
ministers, in hopes that he can exploit a potentially
unstable governing alliance, hobbled by economicand
earthquake-related struggles, to return to power.
A final scenario must be considered: one in which
the opposition bloc loses both the presidency and
parliament. Such an outcome could well lead to deep,
enduring authoritarianism in Turkey, punctuated in
the short term by profound disappointment among
backers of the opposition, when victory seemed in
reach. An exodus from the country could then ensue,
resulting in significant brain drain and other societal
consequences.
Given the election concerns discussed earlier, the
opposition will work hard to notch a clear victory,
but if such a triumph proves elusive, Erdogan could
prematurely declare himself the victor. In response,
international actors should refuse to validate such an
outcome.
Seren Selvin Korkmaz is a political analyst and the
executive director of IstanPol Institute, an Istanbul-based
think tank. She is also a researcher at the Stockholm
University Institute for Turkish Studies, a nonresident
fellow at the Middle East Institute in Washington DC, and
a Marshall Memorial Fellow at the German Marshall Fund
of the United States.
1 Tuba Altunkaya, “Turkey Opinion Poll Tracker: Erdogan vs Kilicdaroglu,” EuroNews, April 3, 2023, https://www.
euronews.com/2023/03/14/turkey-opinion-poll-tracker-erdogan-vs-kilicdaroglu.
2 Reuters, “In Vote Setback for Erdogan, Turkey’s HDP Will Not Field Candidate,” March 22, 2023, https://www.
reuters.com/world/middle-east/vote-setback-erdogan-turkeys-hdp-will-not-field-candidate-2023-03-22/.
3 “Text of Agreement for a Strengthened Parliamentary System,” Nation’s Alliance, February 28, 2022, https://
chp.azureedge.net/162769dcb2b3453f83f75312cb991643.pdf; “Memorandum of Understanding on Common
Policies,” Republican People’s Party, January 30, 2023, https://en.chp.org.tr/haberler/memorandum-ofunderstanding-on-common-policies-january-30-2023.
4 Jonathan Marcus, “U.S. Removes Turkey from F-35 Fighter Jet Programme,” BBC, July 17, 2019, https://www.bbc.
com/news/world-us-canada-49023115.
5 Ezgi Erkoyun, Birsen Altayli, and Ali Kucukgocmen, “Determined to See Fair Vote After Earthquakes, Turks
Mobilise for May Election,” Reuters, March 28, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/determinedsee-fair-vote-after-earthquakes-turks-mobilise-may-election-2023-03-28/.
6 Ezgi Akin, “Turkey’s Pro-Kurdish Party HDP Faces Threat of Closure After Top Court Ruling,” Al-Monitor, January
26, 2023, https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2023/01/turkeys-pro-kurdish-party-hdp-faces-threat-closureafter-top-court-ruling.
7 For the official Green Left Party (YSP) website, see https://yesilsolparti.org.
NOTES
Potential Outcomes for the Kurdish Vote
Guney Yildiz
Turkey’s Kurdish community, accounting for 15–20
percent of the country’s population, is segmented
into three distinct political blocs. The largest, representing
a little more than half of the demographic, mostly leans left,
supporting the Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP). The second-largest, comprising 20–30 percent, gravitates toward social conservatism,
backing President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice
and Development Party (AKP). And the smallest,
about one-sixth of Kurdish voters, opts for the
left-leaning secular Republican People’s Party (CHP)
or other factions.1 Based on surveys conducted by
Rawest Research,2 a polling firm that focuses on
Turkey’s Kurds, the main opposition party—the CHP—
is experiencing a robust upswing in Kurdish support
and could secure around 20 percent of its vote in the
2023 elections. The AKP’s share of Kurdish voters
may remain marginally higher, but the incumbent is
trending downward while the challenger rises.
In the last Turkish parliamentary elections, held in
2018, the HDP earned 11.7 percent of the parliamentary vote and 7 percent for its (incarcerated) presidential candidate, Selahattin Demirtas, who has been party chair since 2014. Early in his term, Demirtas
presided over a substantial increase in support for
the HDP, which doubled its vote share in 2015 to 13.1
percent, from 6.6 percent in 2011.
The HDP embraced a liberal platform, running a
gender-balanced list for the parliamentary elections
in 2015 and including representatives from the
country’s religious minorities, such as Armenians.
This strategy broadened the party’s appeal, forging
a liberal-Kurdish alliance and making the HDP the
third-largest bloc in the legislature, following the AKP
and CHP. In November 2016, however, Demirtas was
imprisoned on charges of inciting violent attacks,
encouraging citizens to protest, affiliating with an
armed terrorist organization, and disseminating
terrorist propaganda. Since then, the government
has jailed many other HDP officials, including elected
deputies and mayors. The party has maintained its
voter base despite government attacks thanks to its
devoted supporters, Demirtas’s political charisma,
and Erdogan’s hard Turkish-nationalist pivot since
2015, which has alienated some conservative
Kurdish AKP voters and driven more than a few
toward the HDP.
The HDP, having recently announced it would not run
its own presidential candidate, has practically asked
its voters to support CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu.3
With neither the opposition leader nor Erdogan
likely to surpass 50 percent on May 14 absent strong
Kurdish support, the HDP will be instrumental in
determining the outcome. The party’s kingmaker role
was exemplified in the 2019 local elections, in which
the Kurdish vote was crucial in securing opposition
victories in major Turkish cities, including Istanbul.4
In previous elections, the HDP made informal
alliances with opposition parties, never supporting
President Erdogan. In fact, during the 2015 election
campaign, the party leadership focused almost
exclusively on preventing Erdogan from becoming
president and reserved most of its hostility for his
party, the result of ideological incompatibility as well
as a lack of trust.5 In 2011 and 2013, the Erdogan
government initiated peace processes with the
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK)—the militant wing of
the Kurdish movement in Turkey, deemed a terrorist
entity by Ankara and Turkey’s NATO allies—but after
the last round of talks collapsed in 2015, Erdogan
booted from the AKP some prominent Kurdish
members who had played a major role in the talks.6
Today’s AKP criminalizes any attempt to engage with
the PKK or even with HDP representatives.
Kurdish voting could follow several possible paths in
the forthcoming elections:
Informal support for the opposition bloc. Given the
HDP’s decision not to field a presidential candidate
and to instead direct supporters to vote against
Erdogan, this is the most likely scenario. Kilicdaroglu
is known for his social democratic views and comes
from a predominantly Kurdish town. The HDP’s base
regards him as an ideal candidate, and party leaders
appreciated his parliament visit on March 20, 2023,
after which the party officially announced that it
would not field a candidate in the elections. If no
presidential candidate earns more than 50 percent
in the first round, a second round of voting will occur
on May 28. The HDP has expressed a wish to see
Erdogan defeated in the first round.
Informal backing of Erdogan’s bloc. This scenario
appears to be nearly impossible. The HDP’s leadership
would consider negotiations with Erdogan only
if the government tackled a range of matters the
leadership deems crucial, such as Turkey’s stance
on the Kurdish-led autonomous administration in
northern Syria, the replacement of HDP officials with
state-appointed officials in municipalities where HDP
candidates won, the release of jailed HDP officials,
and a comprehensive agreement with the PKK that
includes permitting Abdullah Ocalan, its founder and
imprisoned leader, to serve his sentence at home.
Within the Kurdish movement—the dominant trend
for Kurds in Turkey, although not representing the
whole ethnic group—the PKK’s approach to Erdogan
has been more pragmatic than that of the HDP. This
is the case even though the PKK has historically
pursued its goals through violence, including attacks
on civilians, and has regarded itself since 1984 to be
at war with the Turkish army. PKK leader Ocalan has
previously participated in negotiations with Turkish
security officials and the ruling party, while the HDP
leadership has maintained a hostile attitude toward
the AKP. In addition, the PKK recently declared a
unilateral ceasefire with Turkey in response to the
February earthquakes, the result—according to
Kurdish sources—of requests made by U.S. officials
through the group’s allies in northern Syria.7
Despite unconfirmed rumors that Hakan Fidan,
Turkey’s intelligence chief, will be appointed
deputy president—a possible harbinger of renewed
talks with Kurdish militants, given his past work
overseeing peace process activities—President
Erdogan is highly unlikely to offer a fresh opening
to the group.8 The Nationalist Action Party (MHP),
Erdogan’s ally, is strongly anti-Kurdish and would
oppose any such steps.
No support for either side. This scenario could play
out only if the Turkish military undertook an operation
against the Syria-based People’s Defense Units (YPG)—
a PKK offshoot—a move the opposition would
be forced to back, leading to a split with the HDP. This
is also an unlikely scenario, since there is no indication
that Turkey will follow through on its threats to launch
such an operation before the elections. A more plausible
scenario considering recent developments—such as
the reported Turkish attempt to kill YPG commander
Mazloum Kobane Abdi in Iraq on April 7—is a successful
Turkish assassination attempt targeting a YPG or
PKK leader in Iraq or Syria, whether preceding the first
vote or during the runoff stage.9 Such a development
could splinter the opposition in the presidential race,
with Turkish nationalist members of the Nation’s
Alliance, such as the IYI Party, likely lining up behind
the attack and the pro-Kurdish HDP opposing it.
Dissolution of the HDP by the Turkish
Constitutional Court. This scenario became less
likely following the HDP’s decision to field candidates
under the Green Left Party (YSP) banner, a move
premised on the March 2021 filing of a court case
against the HDP following persistent calls to this
end by the MHP and its leader, Devlet Bahceli.10 The
prosecution in the case, which could lead to the
dissolution of the HDP, alleges that the party is the
successor to previously dissolved illegal parties;
that it has links to the PKK; and that party leader
Selahattin Demirtas was involved in mobilizing
people to commit violence.
The court recently postponed its hearing on the
dissolution until April 11. Mixed signals from the
court have heightened worries that the HDP could
face dissolution following the April 9 deadline for
submitting candidate lists, prompting the party’s
leadership to seek participation in the May elections
under the YSP. The court lacks sufficient time to
ban the YSP before the May elections. If it moved to
do so, the pro-HDP electorate would still likely back
Kilicdaroglu in the presidential race, but the YSP
might lose some votes for parliamentary representation
owing to voter confusion.
Can the HDP Maintain an Informal Alliance with the Opposition?
The Nation’s Alliance, or “Table of Six,” as the opposition is known,
is a grand coalition of diverse parties
comprising political Islamists, Turkish nationalists,
social democrats, secularists, and liberals, all united
in their opposition to Erdogan. The coalition has
proven more resilient than initially anticipated by the
Turkish president due to strong anti-Erdogan sentiments
across the political spectrum—and the view
that Turkey can progress only if Erdogan is removed
from power through democratic means. Furthermore,
Kilicdaroglu has served as a unifying force and has
helped maintain cohesion among the various parties.
In September 2021, the HDP outlined its political
road map, which includes a call to return to a
parliamentary system and largely aligns with the
opposition’s program. Notable differences appear
concerning the Kurdish question, however, such as
support for mother tongue education, including in
Kurdish, and for significant local government autonomy.
11 In March 2023, HDP leader Demirtas engaged
in a critical debate with the Turkish nationalist Good
Party (IYI), the second-largest member of the Table
of Six,12 but he has refrained from criticizing the CHP
or Kilicdaroglu, and the HDP leadership has avoided
leveling significant criticism against the opposition.
Tensions between the HDP and IYI may persist
throughout the election period, potentially providing
an opportunity for Kilicdaroglu to dampen the IYI’s
influence over the alliance, or for Erdogan, who could
exploit the tensions to disrupt the informal alliance
between the Table of Six and the HDP.
The Erdogan government has at its disposal various
tactics to prevent the Kurdish population from voting
for the Table of Six. These include attempting to
polarize society over the Kurdish question in order to
splinter the opposition-HDP alliance—a possible path
in the event of a successful Turkish assassination
attempt against a YPG or PKK leader;13 using the
government’s control over the media and state institutions
to suppress the Kurdish and HDP vote; and directly appealing
to the Kurds via a new “opening” that potentially includes
Abdullah Ocalan. The diametrically opposed nature of the
assassination versus “Ocalan peace” paths shows Erdogan’s
utter malleability on the Kurdish issue. At the same time,
Erdogan may attempt to polarize the electorate based
on religious, ethnic, or ideological divisions. These
include Islamic sensitivities; Alevi or Kurdish issues
(Erdogan’s main challenger, Kilicdaroglu, is of Alevi
and Kurdish origin); and Turkey’s secularist history
and past injustices against devout citizens.
The AKP, to regain support from conservative
Kurds who defected after the party aligned with the
Nationalist Action Party (MHP) and used antiKurdish rhetoric,
is now working with the Free Cause Party (HUDA-PAR), a
Sunni Kurdish far-right group whose predecessor “Turkish Hezbollah” terrorized pro-Kurdish civilians and also conservatives out of
step with the group’s austere version of Islam.14 The
Kurdish electorate decisively has favored the HDP over
HUDA-PAR, but the latter could flip a few votes
to Erdogan in areas where it operates.
The government could also appeal cynically to HDP
voters by claiming that there is little difference
between the AKP and the opposition on the Kurdish
issue. As evidence, they could point to occasional
anti-Kurdish remarks by IYI officials, such as
Yavuz Agiralioglu, who questioned the “humanity”
of non-Muslim Kurds and later resigned from the
party, attributing his departure to the HDP’s de facto
backing of the opposition.15
The HDP envisions that a Kilicdaroglu triumph might
herald a less security-based approach to Turkey’s
Kurdish issue and a relaxation of political constraints
on the HDP and its elected representatives. If the
opposition bloc comes to power, the result would likely
be a better government relationship with the Kurdish
community. Such a shift would further empower the
diverse coalition and spotlight the grassroots solidarity
among its supporters, including Kurds.16
Guney Yildiz is a researcher and journalist based in
London whose work focuses on Turkey, Syria, and the
Kurdish community across the Middle East. He previously
served as a visiting fellow with the European Council on
Foreign Relations.
1 Roj Girasun (Rawest Research general director), phone interview by author, March 16, 2023.
2 Girasun, phone interview.
3 Yildiz Yazicioglu, “Did HDP Practically Support Kemal Kilicdaroglu?” (in Turkish), Voice of America, March 22,
2023, https://www.voaturkce.com/a/hdp-fiilen-kemal-kilicdarogluna-destek-mi-verdi/7016745.html; Reuters,
“In Vote Setback for Erdogan, Turkey’s HDP Will Not Field Candidate,” March 22, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/
world/middle-east/vote-setback-erdogan-turkeys-hdp-will-not-field-candidate-2023-03-22/.
4 Galip Dalay, “Istanbul Election: Remaking of Turkey’s New Political Landscape?” SWP Comment, July 15, 2019,
https://www.swp-berlin.org/en/publication/istanbul-election-remaking-of-turkeys-new-political-landscape.
5 “We Will Not Make You the President, HDP Co-Chair Tells Erdogan,” Hurriyet Daily News, March 17, 2015, https://
www.hurriyetdailynews.com/we-will-not-make-you-the-president-hdp-co-chair-tells-erdogan-79792.
6 Guney Yildiz, “The Kurdish Movement’s Disparate Goals and the Collapse of the Peace Process with Turkey,”
Middle East Research and Information Project, August 19, 2020, https://merip.org/2020/08/the-kurdishmovements-disparate-goals-and-the-collapse-of-the-peace-process-with-turkey/.
7 Amberin Zaman (@amberinzaman), post on Twitter, “The USA was among the countries that asked @Mazloum
Abdi to mediate for the PKK’s declaration of ceasefire” (in Turkish), March 9, 2023, 4:30 a.m., https://twitter.com/
amberinzaman/status/1633762085967462400?s=20.
8 “‘Surprise’ Moves from the AKP Are on the Way: Hakan Fidan, Mehmet Simsek, HUDA-PAR” (in Turkish),
Cumhuriyet, March 10, 2023, https://www.cumhuriyet.com.tr/siyaset/akpden-surpriz-hamleler-yolda-hakanfidan-mehmet-simsek-huda-par-2059586.
9 For the recent attempt, see Amberin Zaman, “U.S.-Backed Syrian Kurdish Leader Mazlum Kobane Says Turkey’s
Attempt on Life Not the First,” Al-Monitor, April 8, 2023, https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2023/04/usbacked-syrian-kurdish-leader-mazlum-kobane-says-turkeys-attempt-life-not-first.
10 Esin Isik, “MHP Chairman Bahceli: HDP’s Door Must Be Locked so that It Cannot Be Opened” (in Turkish),
Anadolu Agency, updated December 12, 2020, https://www.aa.com.tr/tr/politika/mhp-genel-baskani-bahcelihdpnin-kapisina-acilmamak-uzere-kilit-vurulmalidir/2074110.
11 See HDP, “Let Us Win Together,” https://hdp.org.tr/Images/UserFiles/Documents/Editor/2021/hdp-declaration27september.pdf.
12 Burhanettin Duran, “Aksener’s HDP Dilemma: Both Options Lead to Dead Ends,” Daily Sabah, March 11, 2023,
https://www.dailysabah.com/opinion/columns/akseners-hdp-dilemma-both-options-lead-to-dead-ends.
13 A recent enactment of such polarization occurred on March 5, when fans of the Turkish soccer team Bursaspor
taunted players from Amedspor, a team from the Kurdish-majority city of Diyarbakir. During the match, Bursapor
fans brandished images of state officials notorious for their criminal acts and human rights violations against the
Kurdish community.
14 “Huda-Par’s Emergence,” Economist, November 23, 2013, https://www.economist.com/europe/2013/11/23/hudapars-emergence.
15 “IYI Party’s Yavuz Agiralioglu: Why Would I Call a Non-Muslim Turk and Kurd Human?” (in Turkish), Tele1,
August 7, 2022, https://tele1.com.tr/iyi-partili-yavuz-agiralioglu-musluman-olmayan-turk-ve-kurte-nicin-insandiyelim-674936/ ; “IP Heavyweight Agiralioglu Resigns from Party over PKK/HDP Ties,” Daily Sabah, March
28, 2023, https://www.dailysabah.com/politics/elections/ip-heavyweight-agiralioglu-resigns-from-party-overpkkhdp-ties.
16 Guney Yildiz, “Turkish Elections: At the Crossroads of Populism,” Forbes, March 29, 2023, https://www.forbes.
com/sites/guneyyildiz/2023/03/29/turkish-elections-at-the-crossroads-of-populism/?sh=476af4738252.
The Foreign Policy Angle
Alper Coskun
In many ways, Turkey’s foreign policy under
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Justice and
Development Party (AKP) has resembled a puzzle
whose pieces do not fit together. Turkey naturally
pursues diverse and, at times, competing sets of
interests. But by casting doubt over its identity as a
NATO ally anchored in the Western security architecture,
Erdogan has weakened Turkey’s standing in the eyes of its
friends and foes alike.
Turkey is regarded today by many as a disruptive
power with a muddled strategic orientation.1 Dreams
of toppling neighboring regimes, such as in Syria, or
building a regional sphere of influence by supporting
ideologically preferred political forces, such as the
Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, have not served
Turkey well.2 Nor has the opportunistic practice of
playing Ankara’s relations with Moscow against its
traditional allies and partners in the West.3
This approach has narrowed Turkey’s circle of
friends, increased its isolation, and weakened its
diplomatic clout, even though Ankara has at times
compensated for inadequate political leverage with
hard power, such as by deploying its drones as far
away as Libya, where it managed to protect the
North African country’s internationally recognized
government against the forces of Gen. Khalifa Haftar
and Russia’s Wagner Group. The forthcoming elections
will give Turkey’s prospective leadership an
opportunity for self-reflection on these matters. And
irrespective of the results, a certain degree of change
lies ahead in Turkey’s foreign policy trajectory.
Turkey’s six-party opposition alliance has an ambitious
foreign policy agenda that rests on reformulating policy
structures and reimagining the Turkish role in the world.4
The alliance enjoys advantages relative to the incumbent
AKP, which has held power for twenty years. For one thing,
the opposition would represent a clean slate and enjoy the
benefit of the doubt with its Western interlocutors. For another,
it could enact democratic and economic reforms
to improve Turkey’s image and generate additional
goodwill with a constructive, consistent foreign
policy outlook. This would strengthen Turkey’s
hand in its engagement with the United States, the
European Union, and other Western states in a way
the AKP can no longer do, given the confidence
deficit it has accrued. The skeptical onlooker, in this
case, will be Russia, which is more than happy with
Turkey’s troubled relations with the West under
Erdogan, a leader once referred to in the Moscow
Times as “our man in NATO.”5
Of course, Erdogan will also make certain calculations
if he wins the elections. Despite his innate tendency
to reject failure, he does not shy away from dramatic
policy changes when he regards them as necessary.
He proved this in late 2020 when he toned down his
combative rhetoric toward the West and concurrently
moved to end Turkey’s regional isolation by mending
fences with the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia,
Egypt, and Israel.6 He took this reckoning to a new
level in Syria,7 where the idea of a handshake with
Bashar al-Assad—once Ankara’s target for regime
change—suddenly became plausible. Realpolitik had
dictated a need for change, and Erdogan obliged.
The Turkish president will continue these efforts
if he remains in power after the May elections and
simultaneously conduct his own Western charm
offensive, despite his visceral aversion to doing so.
The poor condition of the Turkish economy,8 further
aggravated by the recent earthquakes—which caused
damage exceeding $100 billion, alongside grievous
casualties—has forced the president to welcome a
steady flow of foreign aid and external financing,
narrowing his options. Realpolitik will once again
dictate his actions.
In areas where problems have ossified or become
matters of national security, such as disputes with
Greece in the Aegean Sea or over Cyprus, neither
Erdogan’s AKP nor the opposition will budge
easily. The same holds for prioritizing Turkey’s
ongoing fight against terrorist groups, including the
Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) or its Syria-based
affiliate, the People’s Defense Units (YPG). But in
other areas, changes will differ by shades depending
on the electoral winner, as outlined below:
Policy formulation. Contrary to promises made
when Turkey adopted its executive presidential
system in 2017, the new system has not exemplified
good governance. Moreover, the country’s foreign
policy has progressively become tainted by domestic
politics. Perversely, the centralization of power
has siloed line ministries and other institutions at
the lower levels. With all eyes on the presidential
office, these mid- and lower-level institutions have
demonstrated little ability to maintain a culture of
cooperation and coordination among themselves.
The political opposition is therefore campaigning
to revive Turkey’s parliamentary system of governance
—with some modifications to streamline
decisionmaking. On the foreign policy front, it
aims to reinstate the central role of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs in formulating and implementing
policy. This will be consequential in at least two
ways—by disentangling policy decisions from
domestic political motives and by harmonizing
foreign policy messaging, thereby bringing clarity
to Turkey’s positions.
Turkey-U.S. relations. The belief that the United
States is indifferent, if not harmful, to Turkey’s core
interests amounts to conventional wisdom among
many Turkish elites and voters alike, and this will
weigh heavily on any incoming Turkish government.
Matters will only worsen if Turkey’s request to
purchase U.S. F-16s is declined.9
Little daylight separates the AKP from the opposition
in this area, but the opposition—should it triumph—
will engage in a bold effort to reset the relationship,
thus forcing Washington’s hand.10 Here, the opposition
will enjoy three advantages: a lack of baggage
in U.S. eyes, relative to the AKP; (2) a demonstrated
intent to articulate Turkey’s strategic stance as a
NATO ally; and (3) a stance guided by disapproval
of Turkey’s purchase of Russia’s S-400 system and
a corresponding desire to resolve the matter. The
challenge there will lie in finding a compromise
that will not be perceived by the Turkish public as a
humiliating capitulation to American demands while
simultaneously avoiding a total rupture with Russia.
The most likely scenario would be to mothball the
system in Turkey under a subtle, inspection scheme
mutually palatable to Ankara and Washington.
Erdogan would likewise continue trying to reset
Turkey’s relationship with the United States, but
he would struggle to be genuinely forthcoming in a
manner equal to his opponents. More important, he
will be constrained by his entanglement with Vladimir
Putin’s Russia. Erdogan’s strongest card will continue
to be Turkey’s geopolitical significance, and he will try
to leverage this at every opportunity, foremost in the
context of the war in Ukraine. Under these circumstances,
moving away from a transactional bilateral
relationship with the United States will be difficult.
Turkey and NATO. In its quest to ascertain Turkey’s
strategic orientation, the opposition will focus on
better harmonizing the country’s foreign, defense,
and security policies with its NATO membership
requirements. It will refrain from bringing up bilateral
issues in an alliance setting. Meanwhile, under
opposition leadership, Sweden’s chances of joining
NATO before the planned July Summit will increase
significantly.11
By comparison, Erdogan’s commitment to Turkey’s
NATO membership will be halfhearted at best. He
has grown accustomed to playing brinkmanship
games in the alliance context and will do the same
with Sweden’s NATO accession. Moreover, his freelance
engagement with actors like Russia and China
will come up, further tarnishing Turkey’s image as a
NATO ally.
Turkey, Russia, and China. The opposition will
tread carefully between Turkey’s NATO membership
requirements and its interests in maintaining a
nonconfrontational relationship with Russia and
China. Even as it aims to consolidate Turkey’s place
in NATO, it will strive to preclude misunderstandings
in Russia and China of its benign intent. That said,
Turkey will be inclined to call out Russia for its violations
of international law and be more vocal about
offenses against China’s Muslim Uyghur community.
The opposition’s steps to resolve challenges associated
with the Russian S-400 missile defense system
will be a leading factor in relations with Russia, and
could become a source of friction. Turkey made a
single two-battery procurement of the S-400s in late
2017 and has since activated the systems only once,
for testing purposes, storing them in a warehouse
since. Moreover, there are signs that Turkey’s interest
in the S-400 may be waning as it moves closer to
fielding its own systems.12
Turkey, Putin, and the Ukraine war. Erdogan
will not easily relinquish his close, if previously
sometimes uneasy, relationship with Putin. The
more Russia is sanctioned and Putin is isolated on
the international stage, the stronger Erdogan’s hand
will be in the relationship, making the rapport easier
to manage. On the other hand, while ill-conceived
dreams of deepening defense industry cooperation
with Russia have subsided, bilateral cooperation on
other initiatives, including the nuclear reactor now
being built by Russia, will continue.13 Western sanctions
on Russia may upset these developments, and
here Erdogan will be inclined to push limits but not
cross the line. By staying out of the sanctions regime,
Turkey has been able to attract Russian wealth and
increase bilateral trade, only to scale back in the face
of Western unease. Erdogan would continue this
juggling act.14 The opposition would likely remain
outside the sanctions regime as well but be more
vigilant about preventing Turkey from being seen as
a sanctions refuge by its Western allies and partners.
Turkey’s energy-related reliance on Russia, which
has grown again recently, is another area where the
opposition will look to rebalance.15
Engaging Damascus. Facilitating the voluntary
return of Syrians to their homeland has become a
political priority in Turkey. This will push Ankara
toward seeking some form of compromise with the
Syrian regime. While doing so, the AKP and the
opposition will see merit in retaining a working
relationship with Russia and Iran, although the
opposition will be more skeptical of such ties. As
Assad gradually emerges from his international
isolation, he has shown himself to be in no rush with
Turkey and, specifically, careful not to strengthen
Erdogan’s hand before the May elections. The bad
blood with Erdogan suggests Assad would prefer to
talk about normalization with the Turkish opposition.
In any case, Assad’s precondition that Turkey
withdraw from Syria will be a sticking point.16 This
demand is something on which the opposition may
be predisposed to deliver, but only after Turkey’s
security concerns relating to YPG activities in
northern Syria are met satisfactorily. This, in turn,
represents a challenge for Assad, especially given the
continuing U.S. military presence in northeast Syria
and American support for the YPG.17
Turkey and the European Union. European-led relief
and aid efforts after the February earthquakes were
well received in Ankara and breathed positive energy
into an otherwise strained relationship with the
European Union. Moreover, recent positive exchanges
with Greece have increased hopes of greater stability
ahead. Erdogan needs this tranquility more than
ever for economic and political reasons, and he can
be expected to refrain from escalatory behavior in
the postelection period. His hope would be to start
modernizing Turkey’s customs union with the EU—by
broadening its scope, as well as adding services to
already-covered industrial goods—and to enhance
Turkey’s role in Europe’s supply chain as a reliable
manufacturing base. His long record, however, will
inevitably be cause for European skepticism. The
opposition would pursue the same goals with the EU
and enjoy the advantage of being a preferred interlocutor..
Signs already suggest that political change could prompt
a surge in foreign investor interest.18
An opposition-led government could consolidate this
trend by quickly establishing macroeconomic stability
and rebuilding trust in the rule of law and the country’s investment ecosystem.
Alper Coskun is a senior fellow within the Europe Program
at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, where
he leads the Turkey and the World initiative. His research
focuses on Turkish foreign policy, especially in relation to
the United States and Europe.
1 Marc Pierini, “Turkey in Europe: Disruption as a Policy,” Judy Dempsey’s Strategic Europe, Carnegie Europe, May 24,
2022, https://carnegieeurope.eu/strategiceurope/87190.
2 Gonul Tol and Birol Baskan, “From ‘Hard Power’ to ‘Soft Power’ and Back Again: Turkish Foreign Policy in the
Middle East,” Middle East Institute, November 19, 2018, https://www.mei.edu/publications/hard-power-softpower-and-back-again-turkish-foreign-policy-middle-east.
3 Agence France-Press, “Putin, Erdogan and Iran’s Raisi Pledge Cooperation Against ‘Terrorists’ in Syria,” France
24, July 19, 2022, https://www.france24.com/en/asia-pacific/20220719-putin-to-meet-turkey-s-erdogan-andiranian-president-raisi-in-tehran.
4 Nicolas Camut, “Turkish Opposition Unites Behind Kilicdaroglu as Anti-Erdogan Candidate,” Politico, March 6,
2023, https://www.politico.eu/article/turkish-opposition-kilicdaroglu-erdogan-ankara-election/; “Memorandum
of Understanding on Common Policies,” January 30, 2023, https://en.chp.org.tr/haberler/memorandum-ofunderstanding-on-common-policies-january-30-2023.
5 Vladimir Frolov, “Our Man in NATO: Why Putin Lucked Out with Recep Erdogan,” Moscow Times, April 15,
2019, https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2019/04/15/our-man-in-nato-why-putin-lucked-out-with-receperdogan-a65237.
6 For Erdogan’s toned-down rhetoric, see Dimitar Bechev, “What Erdogan’s Tilt to the West Means for RussiaTurkey Relations,” Royal United Services Institute, July 1, 2021, https://rusi.org/explore-our-research/
publications/commentary/what-erdogans-tilt-west-means-russia-turkey-relations; for mending fences, see
Karel Valansi, “Turkey Has Flipped the Script on Its Regional Isolation. But Will It Amount to Real Change?”
TURKEYSource, Atlantic Council, October 12, 2021, https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/turkeysource/turkeyhas-flipped-the-script-on-its-regional-isolation-but-will-it-amount-to-real-change/. For UAE: Natasha Turak,
“Erdogan’s Celebrity Welcome in the UAE Affirms a Sea-Change in Relations, Lifeline for Turkey’s Economy,”
CNBC, February 15, 2022, https://www.cnbc.com/2022/02/15/erdogans-uae-visit-affirms-shift-in-relations-helpfor-turkeys-economy.html; Saudi Arabia: “Turkey, Saudi Arabia Strive to Renew Relations for New Era: Erdogan,”
Daily Sabah, April 29, 2022, https://www.dailysabah.com/politics/diplomacy/turkey-saudi-arabia-strive-to-renewrelations-for-new-era-erdogan; Egypt: Reuters, “Turkey’s Erdogan Shakes Hands with Egypt’s Sisi at World Cup,”
November 20, 2022, https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/turkeys-erdogan-shakes-hands-with-egyptssisi-world-cup-2022-11-20/; Israel: Isabel Kershner and Safak Timur, “Israel’s President Visits Turkey in Sign
of Thawing Relations,” New York Times, March 9, 2022, https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/09/world/middleeast/
israel-isaac-herzog-turkey-visit.html.
7 Andrew Wilks, “Turkey-Syria Summit Postponed at Last Minute as Russia Nudges Rivals to Reconcile,” AlMonitor, March 16, 2023, https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2023/03/turkey-syria-summit-postponed-lastminute-russia-nudges-rivals-reconcile.
8 Liz Alderman, “Turkey’s Reeling Economy Is an Added Challenge for Erdogan,” New York Times, February 19,
2023, https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/19/business/turkey-earthquake-economy-erdogan.html.
9 Michael Crowley and Edward Wong, “Biden Administration Faces Resistance to Plan to Sell F-16s to Turkey,” New
York Times, January 13, 2023, https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/13/us/politics/us-turkey-f16s.html.
10 Nektaria Stamouli, “Turkey’s Anti-Erdogan Opposition Vows a Reset on EU and NATO,” Politico, March 15, 2023,
https://www.politico.eu/article/turkey-anti-recep-tayyip-erdogan-opposition-reset-eu-nato/.
11 “NATO Secretary General Announces Dates for 2023 Vilnius Summit,” NATO, November 9, 2022, https://www.
nato.int/cps/en/natohq/news_208802.htm.
12 Agnes Helou, “As Interest in Russia’s S-400 Wanes, Turkey Pushes Its Own Air Defense Systems,” Breaking
Defense, March 24, 2023, https://breakingdefense.com/2023/03/as-interest-in-russias-s-400-wanes-turkeypushes-its-own-air-defense-systems/.
13 Reuters, “Turkey’s Unfinished Akkuyu Nuclear Plant Not Damaged by Quake,” February 6, 2023, https://www.
reuters.com/world/middle-east/turkeys-unfinished-akkuyu-nuclear-plant-not-damaged-by-quake-rosatomofficial-2023-02-06/.
20 T HE WAS HINGTON INS T I T U T E FOR NE A R E AS T P OL ICY
CAGAPTAY TURKEY’S PIVOTAL 2023 ELECTIONS
14 “Turkey Blocks Transit of Goods Sanctioned by EU, U.S. to Russia,” Bloomberg, March 10, 2023, http://bit.
ly/3ZEfj3q.
15 Patricia Cohen, “Turkey Is Strengthening Its Energy Ties with Russia,” New York Times, December 9, 2022, https://
www.nytimes.com/2022/12/09/business/turkey-erdogan-energy-russia.html.
16 Suleiman Al-Khalidi, “Syria’s Assad Says He Won’t Meet Erdogan Until Turkey Ends Its ‘Occupation,’” Reuters,
March 16, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/syria-assad-says-he-wont-meet-erdogan-untilturkey-ends-its-occupation-2023-03-16/.
17 Lolita C. Baldor, “A Look at the U.S. Military Mission in Syria and Its Dangers,” Associated Press, March 24, 2023,
https://apnews.com/article/syria-us-troops-drone-attack-6194dca97f594e3609914637463c4ce3.
18 Jonathan Spicer and Nevzat Devranoglu, “Foreign Investors Test Turkey’s Waters After Years in the Cold,”
Reuters, March 24, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/foreign-investors-test-turkeys-watersafter-years-cold-2023-03-24/.
How Turkey Might Look After the Polls
Soner Cagaptay
The potential outcomes of Turkey’s May elections—a
presidential-parliamentary sweep for the opposition,
a sweep for Erdogan’s bloc, or a split decision—will
lead Turkey in meaningfully different directions, both
in the short and the long term.
When it comes to Turkey’s foreign policy, an
opposition triumph will prompt an Atlanticist turn,
including on the Ukraine war, while an Erdogan win
will cement the country’s existing transactional
approach. Domestically, an opposition victory will
revive adherence to the rule of law—the new government
will release wrongfully jailed figures such as
the HDP’s imprisoned leader, Selahattin Demirtas,
and the philanthropist Osman Kavala, and lift restrictions
on key freedoms covering media, assembly, and
expression. Such a pivot will improve the country’s
investment environment and invite large cash
inflows, ironically resuscitating a dynamic from the
early Erdogan years. Markets will likely rally, and the
lira will eventually stabilize.
An emphasis on democratic freedoms will warm
relations with Turkey’s largest trade and investment
partner—the European Union, a body Turkey seeks
to join—while heralding short-term economic
stability and growth. Ties with the United States will
strengthen as well, given the opposition’s willingness
to end the drama over the (Russia-supplied) S-400,
even as differences will remain on other issues, such
as U.S. support for the Syria-based Kurdish People’s
Defense Units (YPG). Turkey’s deep economic bonds
with Russia will likewise prevent it from aligning
completely with U.S.-led economic sanctions targeting
Moscow.
In the case of an uncontested Erdogan win, the president
could conceivably ease his general crackdown
on rights and liberties, even as he proceeds with his
model of “stable autocracy.” One can expect an altogether
harsher reality if the results are contested. On
the economic front, Erdogan could embrace the more
conventional economic policies that led to boom
times during his first decade in power, recognizing
the failure of his more recent reliance on unorthodox
views. Even a reversion on economic policy would
not entirely mitigate the negative effects of eroded
rule of law and institutions and the associated
damage to the national economy. Erdogan will therefore
have to navigate continued instability, leaning
on infusions from Russia and the Gulf monarchies
to sustain the lira day-to-day. A key economic challenge
for Turkey will be dealing with the exodus of
educated middle- and upper-class citizens who have
lost hope amid a sweep by Erdogan’s bloc. The cost
in talent will be significant, stunting the country’s
aspirations to become an advanced, wealthy society.
In the short term, to summarize, Turkey will look
more stable economically and politically in the
event of an opposition win, and less so—especially
economically—if Erdogan’s bloc wins both the presidency
and parliament. But to understand long-term
scenarios for the opposition Nation’s Alliance, or
“Table of Six,” one needs to peruse Turkish political
history, wherein no coalition government has ever
finished its full term. Moreover, all thirteen coalition
governments since the early 1970s have ended in
both political and economic crisis. Given the ideologically
disparate nature of the Nation’s Alliance, as
well as its tenuous relationship with the HDP, political
differences will almost inevitably surface among its
component parties, undermining its resilience.
Moreover, proposed reforms, institutional restoration,
and the establishment of checks and balances
will likely be slowed by high-ranking Erdogan
loyalists, while his media acolytes keep fanning
polarization. A “Netanyahu outcome” could therefore
eventually befall Turkey, with the opposition splintering
and Erdogan allying with far-right groups to
rebound in possible snap elections following political
or economic crises.
The Putin Factor
Russian president Vladimir Putin could insinuate
himself into Turkish politics at various future events
to help Erdogan. The Russian president’s overall goal
would be to hinder a potential Atlanticist mandate
for the opposition and either deny the opposition a
victory or help bring Erdogan back to power.
For starters, Putin could initiate new lump-sum financial
transfers to Turkey, as he did in 2022, providing Erdogan
with an economic lifeline. Putin may also
interfere in Turkey’s elections, including by launching
information operations—including fake news—to
undermine opposition unity and manipulate social
media to benefit third-party presidential candidates
such as Muharrem Ince. The Russian leader here would
aim to deny Kilicdaroglu an outright win on May 14,
even if the latter somehow triumphs on May 28, aided
by vote-switchers from Ince as well as abstentions.
Faced with a Kilicdaroglu presidency, Putin may seek
to catalyze economic troubles for Turkey through de
facto embargos on trade and Russian tourist visits.
Russia is Turkey’s number-one source of tourists, and
a June boycott could cost the Turkish economy billions
of dollars for the summer season. Should the opposition
win, Putin also would likely demand immediate
payment of Ankara’s delayed energy bills or even
impose new higher prices on gas exports to Turkey,
this time burdening the economy with hefty bills in
winter. Such penalties could offset Turkey’s short-term
financial gains from Western investment flows.
Putin, furthermore, could delay further natural gas
deliveries, undermining Ankara’s military positions in
Libya, Syria, and the South Caucasus, where Russian
troops and proxies oppose Turkish and Turkish-linked
forces. Such moves, combined with economic troubles
and coalition infighting, could render the opposition
feeble and ineffective in the eyes of the Turkish
electorate. Erdogan could then pitch his restoration as
a return to stability and security.
Prospect of Split Government
While the path to presidential victory is direct—
crossing 50 percent for a candidate in the first round
or, if no one does so, winning a two-person runoff
on May 28—the route to a parliamentary triumph
is quite convoluted, owing to a system of electoral
alliances, as well as a 2022 change to the election law
that favors Erdogan.
In 2022, Erdogan passed a new electoral law through
the parliament,1 replacing an existing law that
apportioned seats based on aggregate votes and
favored stronger electoral alliances. Predicting that
the opposition Nation’s Alliance would be stronger
than his People’s Alliance, Erdogan supplanted the
law with one that favors stronger parties—in this
case, his own AKP.
Accordingly, on May 14, Erdogan’s AKP, together
with its allies, could win a legislative majority even
if these parties collectively fail to reach 50 percent
of the vote. If fact, some simulations show Erdogan’s
bloc winning a majority with as little as 45 percent
support thanks to the new electoral law.2
A split-government outcome in the May elections—
with Erdogan’s bloc winning the parliament and
the opposition taking the presidency—appears to
be the most likely scenario at the time of writing.
This outcome could result in early elections as well,
this time precipitated by an even quicker political
crisis—triggered by the Erdogan majority bloc and
Erdogan-appointed bureaucrats sabotaging reform
efforts, with Putin playing the spoiler. Amid the
ensuing government impasse, snap elections could
be held within the next couple of years.
1 Didem Yilmaz, “The Effects of the Latest Modifications on Electoral Laws in Turkey,” Heinrich Boll Stiftung,
September 13, 2022, https://tr.boell.org/en/2022/09/13/effects-latest-modifications-electoral-laws-turkey.
2 Nezi Onur Kuru (@NOnukuru), “If the new election law had been implemented in 2018, the number of
MPs of the Nation’s Alliance would have decreased by 19 and the Cumhur [People’s Alliance] would have
increased from 344 to 358. The people would get 59.7% of the Turkish Grand National Assembly with 53.7%
of the votes” (in Turkish), post on Twitter, September 11, 2022, 5:51 a.m., https://twitter.com/NOnurkuru/
status/1568899969964277760.
NOTES
Conclusion: Defending the Vote and Turkish Democracy
Soner Cagaptay
Ultimately, Turkey’s nearly 61 million voters will
determine the country’s future direction on May
14, casting one ballot each for president and parliament—and possibly in a May 28 presidential runoff.1
The outcome of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
most serious challenge in twenty years will have
long-term ramifications both within Turkey and
outside its borders. For the United States, Turkey is
an important NATO ally, including in the context of
the Ukraine war. It also figures prominently in the
alliance’s Nordic expansion and in the great power
competition pitting Washington against Moscow,
Beijing, and Tehran. Setting aside its milestone status
since Turkey’s first free and fair vote in 1950, the
contest could also be the most consequential on the
world stage in 2023, given Turkey’s global role.
A Longer Tradition of Free Elections
than Spain
A peaceful election season, which as of now remains
most likely, is important for Turkey’s stability. This
hopeful prospect owes in part to Turkey’s deep
democratic traditions—it has held elections longer
than has Spain—and its record of generally smooth
handovers. Finally, Turkey’s citizens have shown a
love of voting. In the 2019 nationwide local elections,
for example, turnout was at 86 percent.2 Citizens
often return to polling places after they have voted to
observe and assist the count. They are, in this sense,
a safety valve for Turkish democracy.
But Unfair Races of Late
Nevertheless, election campaigns in Turkey—
especially since the switch to an executive-style
presidential system in 2018—have become increasingly unfair.
This is because President Erdogan
has expanded his grip over the media, courts, and
independent bodies such as the national Supreme
Election Council (YSK), thereby undermining their
integrity. More and more, these institutions take
their cue from him, endangering election security.
The unfair climate actually predated the change to a
presidential system. In 2014, for example, Erdogan’s
candidate for Ankara mayor, Melih Gokcek, trailed
his rival by 27,000 votes on election night, March 30,
2014, only to be declared winner by 31,000 votes
following an “overnight recount.”3 Five years later,
on May 6, 2019, the YSK annulled the results of the
March 2019 elections in Istanbul, which had delivered
a loss to Erdogan’s party.4 Notably, YSK officials
had remained mum for five weeks on the matter, only
announcing their decision after Erdogan claimed the
vote had been rigged.5
Some key bureaucrats, too, have started openly
supporting the government, blurring the party
state distinction, as well as making state resources
unfairly available to the Justice and Development
Party (AKP) and its chair—none other than Erdogan
himself. For instance, AKP officials frequently hold
joint press conferences with governors—the top
bureaucrats in Turkey’s eighty-one provinces—often
at the governors’ offices, suggesting the steady but
sad erosion of the party-state firewall.6 Together with
Erdogan’s complete control of the police, a national
force reporting to his interior minister, these dynamics
will help Erdogan at the ballot box, while also
providing his camp with a competitive advantage
to potentially overpower the opposition bloc if the
vote is contested or if the presidential race goes to a
runoff on May 28. Another threat to the opposition
has emerged lately in the third-party candidacy of
populist CHP defector Muharrem Ince, who is getting
outsize attention in pro-Erdogan media outlets and
social media platforms and could, accordingly, pull
enough votes from the CHP-led coalition to force a
presidential runoff.7
Democratic Resilience and Likely a Free Vote
A broadly free vote could help counter the unsettling
prospect of coercive AKP behavior. Moreover,
elections in Turkey still matter as a source of legitimacy,
including for President Erdogan’s base. The ultimate
outcome of the 2019 Istanbul mayoral vote
offers a case in point. In that race, Erdogan’s candidate-
Binali Yildirim—had fallen short by 13,000 votes
to Republican People’s Party (CHP) candidate
Ekrem Imamoglu in March, only to be trounced by
800,000 votes in the June redo. The president had
wrongly believed his sway over Turkey’s bureaucracy,,
institutions, and media would help him reverse the outcome.
The huge margin for the CHP reflected many vote-switchers
and participation by others who had stayed home for the
initial vote.
The message was clear: Even losers have to respect the
outcome. Also bitter for Erdogan was Gokcek’s loss
of the Ankara mayoralty—won in the rigged 2014
contest—to Mansur Yavas. To emphasize its messaging on
democracy, the opposition is running both Imamoglu and Yavas
as vice presidential candidates this year. This is democracy, the party
is proclaiming.
Embrace it.
In the forthcoming elections, large-scale rigging is
unlikely. As in 2014 and 2019, however, Erdogan’s
advisors could counsel refusing to recognize the
outcome in narrowly contested districts—separated
by perhaps 1–2 percent for president, or a seat or
two for parliament—claiming fraud as they did for
Istanbul in March 2019. Still stinging from that
ultimate outcome, though, Erdogan may actually
reject such a tack. Further, if election security were
under threat, Turkey’s civil society could push back
successfully to protect the country’s democracy, as it
did four years ago in Istanbul.8
The Central Role of Information Flow
Even then, the U.S. government can take note of the
following areas where Turkey’s citizens will work
hardest to keep the vote free and the country stable.
Information flow to the OSCE mission. Turkey
has a long tradition of transparent vote-counting,
reinforced by a broad middle class and strong civil
society groups focused on election monitoring and
security. These civil society groups, which include
Oy ve Otesi (Vote and Beyond), Turkiye Gonulluleri
(Volunteers of Turkey), and Secim Guvenligi Platformu
(Platform for Election Security),9 have long worked
with European bodies such as the Organization
for Security and Cooperation (OSCE), which will be
sending an election-monitoring mission to Turkey.
Citizens will take the OSCE findings seriously,
given Turkey’s historic relationship with Europe.
For its part, Washington can help ensure the rapid
flow of election results from Turkish civil society to
the European body and from there to global audiences—and
once again, vetted and emphatic, back to Turkey.
Openness of social media platforms. Another way
for pro-democracy actors to facilitate the free flow
of information is by empowering responsible social
media channels. In reaction to what is essentially
a government monopoly on Turkish conventional
media—with pro-Erdogan businesses controlling
nearly 90 percent of such outlets—citizens have
migrated to social media platforms in even larger
numbers than the rest of the world. With at least
18.6 million Turkish users on Twitter alone,10 for
instance, Turkey is the world’s seventh-largest user
of the service, vis-à-vis a global population ranking
of eighteenth.11
Simply put, social media has become the media in
Turkey. Erdogan’s response has been to impose
blackouts, content bans, and—finally—access restrictions,
as he did on February 8, only two days after the
earthquakes, when he visited the country’s disaster-stricken
provinces.12 To prevent criticism over the
uncoordinated nature of earthquake relief efforts, the
president’s advisors narrowed access bandwidth for
Twitter, making communication over the platform all
but impossible for hours.
Turkey’s citizens are resourceful and have become
technology savvy to bypass internet bans. The
U.S. government, in turn, could consider working
with social media platforms to devise strategies
and technologies to ensure Ankara does not
throttle social media access and hamper the flow
of information. A Turkish social media law passed
in 2020 forces global platforms to open offices in
the country, exposing them to sanctions and fines,
and their staff to imprisonment, if the firms fail to
respond to government directives to ban or limit
content.13 This will be Washington’s biggest hurdle
as it encourages social media companies not to give
in to censorship.
The Need for Common Transatlantic Messaging on
Turkey’s Economic Ties to the West
To deliver its messaging on the Turkish elections
most effectively, Washington should coordinate
with its European allies. Notwithstanding Erdogan’s
(partially) successful efforts to shift Turkey’s
identity—at home, from secular to Islamic; internationally,
from European to Middle Eastern—the country remains
economically part of Europe and
a customs union, and as a resource-poor country,
Turkey needs Western financial inflows in order to
grow.14 The EU alone furnishes around 70 percent
of foreign direct investment in Turkey,15 and Turkey
and the EU are part of each other’s supply chains, so
entwined is their relationship.
Erdogan would struggle to ignore a unified U.S.-
Europe message on election security and integrity,
especially given its links to Turkey’s long-term
economic prospects. To be sure, the president has
embraced a transactional view of foreign policy
and he may threaten retaliatory measures, such as
further delaying Sweden’s NATO accession. In this
regard, Britain—which is trusted by Erdogan and
Turkey’s security elites, among other reasons, for
having quickly reached out after the failed 2016 coup
attempt—can play messenger and goodwill ambassador
for the West.
Possible Offer from the Opposition
In the unlikely scenario in which Erdogan signals his
intent to reject the vote outcome, the opposition—to
secure its own interests as well as a democratic
transition—would almost certainly need to promise
not to prosecute the president, his family members,
or key figures in his administration. Recognizing the
various pressures facing the opposition, including a
fragile economy and possible snap elections that could
conceivably return Erdogan to power (explained in the
previous section, on Turkey’s outlook after the polls),
Erdogan may take up this offer.
Beware of Russian Meddling
If Britain is America’s best partner when it comes to
Turkey policy, Russia is its worst adversary. By transferring
significant funds to Turkey before the elections—
and helping boost Erdogan’s popularity—Russia’s
President Vladimir Putin has already picked sides.16
As noted, Putin could potentially send more money, as
well as engage in information operations aimed manipulating
social media content and interfering in the
elections. Putin’s likely motives to interfere in Turkey’s
democratic process will spike if the presidential
vote goes to a runoff. An Erdogan win would give the
Russian president cause for hope as the war in Ukraine
drags on with little for him to celebrate.
Behold Turkey’s Democratic Memory
None of the mechanisms suggested here to defend
the vote in Turkey could work were it not for the
country’s resilient democratic tradition. This could
be reason for optimism as Turkish voters prepare to
go to the polls in May. If a core lesson of America’s
interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan is that it takes
much time and effort to build a democracy, then the
Erdogan era dictates that tearing down a democracy
also requires a lot of work. Free elections in Turkey
still matter, and the vote in May will likely be free and
peaceful. Less certain is what future elections will
look like if Erdogan wins.
NOTES
1 “Nearly 61 Million Electorates [sic] to Cast Votes in May 14 Polls,” Hurriyet Daily News, March 24, 2023, https://
www.hurriyetdailynews.com/nearly-61-million-electorates-to-cast-votes-in-may-14-polls-181855.
2 Although voting in Turkey is, in fact, compulsory, no enforcement occurs and anyway entails a small cash
payment—about US$5, as of 2019. Voter participation is therefore regarded as being driven by a desire to
participate; for the 86 percent figure, see Sebnem Gumuscu, “In Turkey, the Latest Elections Had Over 80
Percent Turnout. Here’s Why,” Monkey Cage (blog), Washington Post, June 30, 2019, https://www.washingtonpost.
com/politics/2019/06/30/turkey-latest-elections-had-over-percent-voter-turnout-heres-why/.
3 For details on the finish, see Firat Kozok, “24-Hour Scandal in Ankara” (in Turkish), Cumhuriyet, April 1, 2014,
https://www.cumhuriyet.com.tr/haber/ankarada-24-saatlik-skandal-56167; Oguz Demir, “In the Breathtaking
Ankara Race, Both Candidates Claim Victory” (in Turkish), Hurriyet, March 31, 2014, https://www.hurriyet.com.tr/
gundem/ankara-yarisi-nefes-kesti-iki-aday-da-kazandim-dedi-26122247; “Gokcek Gets Mandate” (in Turkish),
Sozcu, April 5, 2014, https://www.sozcu.com.tr/2014/gundem/gokcek-mazbata-aliyor-481804/; “How Many Votes
Did Parties Receive in Ankara in the 2014 Local Elections” (in Turkish), T24, November 27, 2018, https://t24.
com.tr/haber/2014-yerel-secimlerinde-ankarada-hangi-parti-ne-kadar-oy-almisti,758006.
4 Zia Weise, “Turkish Authorities Cancel Istanbul Mayoral Election,” Politico, May 6, 2019, https://www.politico.eu/
article/turkish-authorities-cancel-istanbul-mayoral-election/.
5 Weise, “Turkish Authorities Cancel,” https://www.politico.eu/article/turkish-authorities-cancel-istanbul-mayoralelection/; Bethan McKernan, “Erdogan’s AKP Party Seeks Rerun of Istanbul Mayoral Election,” Guardian, April
9, 2019, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/apr/09/turkey-erdogan-akp-party-seeks-rerun-of-istanbulmayoral-election.
26 T HE WAS HINGTON INS T I T U T E FOR NE A R E AS T P OL ICY
CAGAPTAY TURKEY’S PIVOTAL 2023 ELECTIONS
6 “Governor, Refusing to See Imamoglu, Hews to AKP’s Side” (in Turkish), Sozcu, March 12, 2022, https://www.
sozcu.com.tr/2022/gundem/imamogluna-randevu-vermeyen-vali-akplilerin-yanindan-ayrilmiyor-7005284/.
7 Orhan Coskun and Daren Butler, “Breakaway Candidate Could Give Erdogan a Lifeline in Tight Turkey Election,”
Reuters, April 4, 2023, https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/breakaway-candidate-could-give-erdoganlifeline-tight-turkey-election-2023-04-04/.
8 See, e.g., “A Black Mark in Our History of Democracy and Law,” statement by forty-nine bar associations, Bianet
English, May 9, 2019, https://bianet.org/english/politics/208325-a-black-mark-in-our-history-of-democracyand-law.
9 For Oy ve Otesi, see https://oyveotesi.org/; for Turkiye Gonulluleri, https://turkiyegonulluleri.org/; for Secim
Guvenligi, https://secimguvenligi.org/.
10 “Twitter Statistics and Trends,” Data Reportal, https://datareportal.com/essential-twitter-stats.
11 “Population, Total,” World Bank, https://data.worldbank.org/indicator/SP.POP.TOTL?most_recent_value_
desc=true.
12 Reuters, “Twitter Restricted in Turkey Two Days After Quake, Says NetBlocks,” February 8, 2023, https://www.
reuters.com/business/media-telecom/twitter-restricted-turkey-netblocks-2023-02-08/.
13 Sude Akgundogdu, Turkish Backlash: How Street Interviews Spread Anti–Syrian Refugee Sentiment (Washington DC:
Washington Institute, 2023), https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/turkish-backlash-how-streetinterviews-spread-anti-syrian-refugee-sentiment.
14 Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, “Customs Union,” November 15, 2022, https://www.ab.gov.tr/customsunion_46234_en.html.
15 Presidency of the Republic of Turkiye Investment Office, “2021 Foreign Direct Investments in Turkiye,” https://
www.invest.gov.tr/en/library/publications/lists/investpublications/foreign-direct-investments-in-turkiye-2021.
pdf.
16 “Russia Transfers Billions of Dollars to Turkey for $20B Nuclear Plants,” Daily Sabah, July 29, 2022, https://www.
dailysabah.com/business/energy/russia-transfers-billions-of-dollars-to-turkey-for-20b-nuclear-plant.
AFTERWORD AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I edited this set of essays over March and April 2023 with the aim of understanding the complex drivers that will determine
the outcome of the vote in Turkey, from an unfair campaign season to a likely free vote on May 14, along with potentially
consequential changes such as the entry of Muharrem Ince and the seemingly obscure role of actors like the Free Cause
Party (HUDA-PAR). The political scene is very dynamic in Turkey, and future developments could foil the various predictions offered here. Whatever happens from now on, I hope these essays offer a useful snapshot of Turkey at this moment
of political uncertainty. I’d like to thank all my contributors for their deft analysis as well as editors Jason Warshof and
Miriam Himmelfarb and research assistant Sude Akgundogdu. Final thanks go to designer Daniel Kohan.
—Soner Cagaptay, April 2023
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