Turkish opposition deepens cooperation, heaping pressure on Erdogan
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[October 08, 2021]
By Daren Butler and Birsen Altayli
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Six Turkish opposition
parties are stepping up collaboration in their bid to unseat Tayyip
Erdogan and his AK Party at elections due by 2023, raising pressure on
the president as opinion polls point to dwindling support for his ruling
alliance.
Broadening the coordination which helped them deal a blow to Erdogan at
2019 local elections, the parties held a third meeting on Tuesday and
plan weekly meetings to agree shared principles by year-end, those
involved in the talks said.
"The opposition in Turkey is trying something that has never been tried
before: getting united to confront the government," political
commentator Murat Yetkin said.
Support for Erdogan's government is ebbing amid criticism of its
handling of economic woes such as high inflation and unemployment, the
COVID-19 pandemic and forest fires and floods.
Opinion polls show the AK Party on around 31-33%, down from 42.6% in the
2018 parliamentary election, and its nationalist MHP ally on 8-9%, down
from 11.1%, levels which would lead to Erdogan losing control of
parliament at the next election.
The opposition talks aim to identify shared principles, rather than
agreeing a presidential candidate, with the goal of ditching the
presidential system of government introduced in 2018 and returning to a
parliamentary system, participants said.
IYI Party deputy chairman Bahadir Erdem said they agreed to focus on
issues such as independence of the judiciary, media and academia, and
laws concerning political parties and elections, with the aim of
boosting the separation of powers and democracy.
"These six parties coming together is giving people hope. Instead of
divisiveness, there is togetherness, uniting on common ground," Erdem
told Reuters, contrasting it with what he said was the polarisation
under two decades of AKP rule.
CHP deputy chairman Muharrem Erkek, who also attended the talks, said
Turkey was being "dragged to the edge of a precipice" by the
presidential system, which puts far greater powers in the hands of the
head of state.
"Citizens' problems are worsening under this one-man system... A
strengthened parliamentary system will inspire confidence," he said.
Senior AK Party deputy Bulent Turan dismissed the talks on restoring the
parliamentary system as "reactionary", saying the new system worked well
and had reduced political instability.
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Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in Sochi, Russia September 29,
2021. Sputnik/Vladimir Smirnov/Pool via REUTERS
CHALLENGES
An alliance of the right-wing IYI Party and the centre-left CHP led
to Erdogan's AKP losing control of Istanbul and Ankara
municipalities in 2019, shattering his image of invincibility.
Since then, the government has faced growing economic and political
challenges, and its handling of them has triggered rare expressions
of concern in pro-Erdogan media.
Sabah newspaper columnist Dilek Gungor questioned the government's
success in communicating its achievements, such as major
infrastructure projects over the last 20 years.
"Unfortunately, the government cannot even motivate its own base
despite all these services and huge projects," she wrote.
One-time allies of Erdogan are among the leaders of parties involved
in the opposition talks, with ex-prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu's
Future Party and ex-economy minister Ali Babacan's Deva Party taking
part.
However the talks do not include the second biggest opposition
party, the pro-Kurdish HDP, which has said it is not seeking to join
any alliance.
Polling consultancy Konda's general manager Bekir Agirdir said
left-wing and Kurdish voices needed to be involved in discussions if
they aim to boost democracy.
"If the opposition does not look from the perspective of pluralism,
it may win the election... but this change may create new and bigger
chaos as it does not solve the country's real social problems," he
told the T24 media outlet.
(Additional reporting by Birsen Altayli; Writing by Daren Butler;
Editing by Dominic Evans and Gareth Jones)
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