Erdogan rival appeals to Turkish youth ahead of runoff vote
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[May 16, 2023]
By Daren Butler
ISTANBUL (Reuters) - Tayyip Erdogan's presidential challenger appealed
to young Turkish voters on Tuesday to support him in a May 28 election
runoff, as he seeks to prevent the president extending his rule of
NATO-member Turkey into a third decade.
Kemal Kilicdaroglu, the candidate of a six-party opposition alliance,
won 45% support in Sunday's vote while Erdogan got 49.5%, falling just
short of the majority needed to avoid a runoff of a vote seen as a
referendum on his autocratic rule.
Turkish assets weakened for a second day, especially government and
corporate bonds and banking stocks, as investors bet that Erdogan would
win another five-year term and continue his unorthodox economic
policies.
However, Kilicdaroglu, 74, sought to rally his supporters, many now
downcast, putting a positive spin on the outcome.
"A message of change emerged from the ballot box. Those who want change
in this country are now more than those that don't want it,"
Kilicdaroglu said, referring to Erdogan falling short of 50%, in a
series of tweets addressed to "dear young people".
In a parliamentary election held simultaneously, Erdogan's AK Party and
its nationalist and Islamist partners won 322 of 600 seats in the new
parliament, achieving a majority that will enable him to argue that
voting for him will ensure stability.
'DARK TUNNEL'
Kilicdaroglu appealed to young voters with references to the
cost-of-living crisis, which in Turkey has been much exacerbated by
Erdogan's insistence on cutting interest rates, causing a sharp slide in
the lira and soaring inflation.
"You don't have enough money for anything," he said. "Your joy of life
was taken away. Whereas youth should be free of worry."
"You won't get your youth back again. We have 12 days to get out of this
dark tunnel...," Kilicdaroglu added.
Kilicdaroglu has vowed to revive democracy after years of state
repression, return to orthodox economic policies, empower institutions
that lost autonomy under Erdogan and rebuild frayed ties with the West.
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Kemal Kilicdaroglu, presidential
candidate of Turkey's main opposition alliance, walks at the
Republican People's Party (CHP) headquarters on election night in
Ankara, Turkey May 15, 2023. REUTERS/Yves Herman
The vote is being closely followed in Washington, Europe and across
the region, where Erdogan has asserted Turkish power. He has also
strengthened ties to Russia, putting strain on Ankara's traditional
alliance with the United States.
The European Union's top diplomat, Josep Borrell, called on Turkey
on Tuesday to fix shortcomings in its election process that were
identified by European observers.
In Sunday's presidential vote, nationalist candidate Sinan Ogan came
third with 5.2% support and there will be much focus now on how his
supporters will vote on May 28.
In a potential boost to Erdogan, Ogan told Reuters in an interview
on Monday he would only endorse Kilicdaroglu in the runoff if the
latter ruled out any concessions to a pro-Kurdish party,
parliament's third largest.
That party, the HDP, backs Kilicdaroglu but is accused of ties to
Kurdish militants, which it denies.
Opinion polls had shown Erdogan, 69, trailing Kilicdaroglu, but
Sunday's outcome suggested he and his Islamist-rooted AK Party were
able to rally conservative voters despite Turkey's economic woes.
Kilicdaroglu and his alliance want to restore a parliamentary system
of government and scrap the powerful executive presidency introduced
by Erdogan.
The AKP came first in Sunday's parliamentary vote with 267
lawmakers, followed by Kilicdaroglu's secularist CHP on 169 and the
pro-Kurdish party on 61.
The prospect of five more years of Erdogan's rule will upset civil
rights activists campaigning for reforms to undo the damage they say
he has done to Turkey's democracy. He says he respects democracy.
Thousands of political prisoners and activists could be released if
the opposition prevails.
(Reporting by Daren Butler, Karin Strohecker; Editing by Gareth
Jones)
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