First-time voters may have decisive say in Turkish election
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[May 08, 2023]
By Birsen Altayli and Ezgi Erkoyun
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Turkish university student Yunus Efe has known only
one leader of his country - Tayyip Erdogan. As he prepares to vote for
the first time in elections this month, the 22-year-old says it is time
for change.
Efe is one of more than 6 million first-time voters expected to cast
ballots in the May 14 election. Roughly 10% of the electorate, their
votes could prove critical in deciding whether Erdogan's rule continues
into a third decade or comes to an end.
A toddler when Erdogan came to power in 2003, Efe said his vote will go
to the opposition's Kemal Kilicdaroglu, who he believes will strengthen
rule of law, human rights and freedom of expression - which critics say
have suffered under Erdogan.
"I am definitely concerned about freedom of expression. In fact, I
experience this every day but we do not realize it because we got used
to living this way," said Efe, describing how he thinks twice before
liking or sharing social media posts.
Human Rights Watch, in a 2022 report, said thousands of people have
faced arrest and prosecution every year in Turkey for social media
posts, typically charged with defamation, insulting the president, or
spreading terrorist propaganda.
Ankara says its measures are necessary to fight disinformation spreading
on media and internet.
Efe said he had been apathetic about the elections and politics "like
many young people", but was now excited to vote and attracted by the
promises of Kilicdaroglu and his Republican People's Party (CHP), one of
six parties allied against Erdogan.
"I think that the rights can be restored and justice can be
re-established," Efe said, speaking in central Istanbul.
The sentiment points to the challenge facing Erdogan and his
Islamist-rooted AK Party as they try to rally support for the
presidential and parliamentary polls, with their popularity hit by a
cost-of-living crisis and dizzying inflation.
Sensing their best chance yet of unseating Erdogan, his opponents are
promising to reverse many of his signature policies, including
abolishing the all-powerful presidency seen by critics as a symbol of
his drive to wield ever greater control.
'ANGRY AND HOPELESS'
Erdogan's share of the vote among young and first-time voters is
forecast to be lower than among other age groups, said Erman Bakirci
from pollster Konda Arastirma.
Describing young voters as a "very angry and hopeless" segment of
Turkey's 85 million people, Bakirci said they would be crucial to the
result because they are such a large block.
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Yunus Efe, a 22-year-old Bogazici
University student, chats with his friend at coffee house in
Istanbul, Turkey May 4, 2023. REUTERS/Dilara Senkaya
"They see via internet and social media what their peers in Europe
are doing and what opportunities they have," Bakirci said. "They see
that the difference between them widened ... They lack social,
economic and legal security. They want to get out of this
situation."
Erdogan has championed the youth in his campaign while also
criticising them for failing to appreciate how Turkey's economy has
developed on his watch, harking back to more difficult times before
the AK Party came to power.
Erdogan, who oversaw an economic boom in his first several years in
power, has traditionally drawn support from Turkey's conservative
voters in Turkey's Anatolian Islamic heartlands.
Research conducted by pollster Konda last year showed that 57% of
the first-time voters described themselves as modern, 32% described
themselves as traditional conservatives, and the remainder described
themselves as religious conservatives.
Emre Orgun, a 22-year-old who works in the information technology
department of a textile company in Istanbul, said he would be voting
for Erdogan because he did not think the opposition could manage
Turkey as well as the veteran leader.
"Of course I want the current government to continue. We want them
to continue with some changes in some officials and policies," Orgun
said. He said his main problems are high prices and job
opportunities.
But a patternmaker working at the same Istanbul company said she
would cast her vote for Kilicdaroglu.
The patternmaker, who gave her name as Berivan, said she had been
forced to give up on her dream of becoming a lawyer due to financial
constraints. Criticising the state of the education system and the
economy, she said you need friends in the right places to get
anywhere.
"I believe the youth has the opportunity to change things. I think
many young people think the same way. Education and the economy are
in very bad condition," said Berivan, speaking from the company's
sewing workshop.
"This situation can be changed by the person the youth chooses to
trust," Berivan said. "We have only one choice as a candidate and we
have to trust him."
(Reporting by Ezgi Erkoyun and Birsen Altayli; Editing by Tom Perry
and Nick Macfie)
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