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The Grand Turk
President Erdogan tightens his grip on power in surprise landslide victory
2015-11-02
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has won a decisive victory in the Turkish parliamentary election, with his Justice and Development Party (AKP) winning a majority of seats and defeating the other three opposition parties.

With 98 per cent of the vote counted, the AKP had won 49.4 per cent and 316 seats in the 550 seat parliament, a far better performance than predicted by the polls. These had mostly forecast that the AKP would fail to win back the majority it lost in the last election on 7 June.

“Today is a victory for our democracy and our people ... Hopefully, we will serve you well for the next four years and stand in front of you once again in 2019,” Prime Minister and AKP leader Ahmet Davutoglu said last night.

The pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) had a surprisingly sharp fall in its vote from 13 per cent in the last election, which denied the AKP its majority, to bring it dangerously close to the 10 per cent threshold below which it would lose all its members of parliament. This would have left Turkey’s Kurdish minority, with its long history of confrontation with the state, without any effective parliamentary representation.

As president, Mr Erdogan is theoretically above the political fray, but has clearly directed the AKP’s strategy which has confounded all forecasts. These had strongly suggested a repeat of the stalemate of the last election and the likelihood of a coalition government or even a third election.

In the wake of the AKP’s spectacular victory, it will be in a strong position to take control of all remaining levers of power: army, security services and media. Ever since it first formed a government in 2002, the AKP has been progressively eliminating all opponents in positions of authority in the secular Turkish state founded by Kemal Ataturk. Almost all the state and private media has already come under AKP control, which is one factor explaining its gain in votes. State television has given blanket coverage to Mr Erdogan and the AKP, while largely ignoring its opponents.
Posted by:Steve White

#5  He won by a mudslide.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2015-11-02 16:25  

#4  probably little or no actual vote fraud

the fraud was that Erdogan's party had crushed most media opposition (similar to our country in some sense)
Posted by: lord garth   2015-11-02 10:46  

#3  The Kurds are key to defeating ISIL. Erdogan will ignite a civil war with the Kurds. This is bad.
Posted by: Sven the pelter   2015-11-02 07:01  

#2  not good
Posted by: newc   2015-11-02 01:46  

#1  It's not these who vote, but these who count the votes?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2015-11-02 00:54  

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