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WSWS : News
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East : Turkey
Turkey: Victory for the AKP in local elections masks social
tensions
By Justus Leicht and Sinan Ikinci
16 April 2004
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The moderate Islamic AKP (Party of Justice and Development)
led by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayip Erdogan emerged the
winner of local elections in Turkey on March 28. The traditional
parties of the Turkish establishment lost further ground and left-wing
and Kurdish parties are hit by a particularly deep crisis.
With almost 43 percent of votes across the country, the ruling
AKP increased the 34 percent it won in the 2002 national parliamentary
elections by an extra 9 percent. The only opposition party with
representation in Parliament, the left-wing Kemalist CHP (Republican
Peoples Party), gained just 18 percenta loss of 2 percent
compared with the national elections of 2002.
In the event, the CHP was only able to maintain a degree of
support in the wealthier provincial regions on the Turkish west
coast. Among the four major cities the party was only able to
win Izmir, with the AKP winning a majority in the cities of Istanbul,
Adana and the Turkish capital, Ankara. The AKP also took the tourist
centre Antalya, where the head of the CHP, Deniz Baykal, was the
partys candidate.
The AKP had gone to some lengths to present itself as moderate
and statesmanlike. In the main the partys candidates sought
to avoid any confrontations with the Kemalist establishment, although
according to some estimates two-thirds of them come from the ranks
of the fundamentalist Milli Görüs (National View). A
number of candidates made a point of publicly shaving off their
Islamic beards.
The main reason for the success of the AKP is public identification
of the party with economic recovery and furthering democratic
renewal of the country. In 2001, Turkey went through a devastating
financial crisis that wiped out many working and middle class
incomes. Since then the situation has largely stabilised. The
economy has grown and there has been a marked decline in the rate
of inflation. Ordinary people associated such developments with
Erdogans party, although there has been little real improvement
in their lives.
Following the financial crisis the International Monetary Fund
imposed a reform programme on Turkey, which only served
to worsen widespread poverty and already high levels of unemployment.
Contrary to its election promises, when it spoke of standing up
to the IMF, since taking over government the AKP has in fact pursued
and implemented barely unchanged the IMF programme of privatisation,
deregulation, price and tax increases for consumers and cuts in
grants for small farmers.
At the same time the party has pursued a certain degree of
liberalisation, such as increasing penalties for torture, rescinding
the death penalty and granting permission for the setting up of
Kurdish private schools. The practical consequences have been
more of a symbolic nature; nevertheless they have served to encourage
popular hopes for further democratisation of the country and its
economy in the run-up to possible membership of the European Union.
Nevertheless, the relative recovery in the economy is far from
stable. Not least among the reasons for the recovery has been
the fact that the IMF and World Bank have supplied Turkey with
millions in the form of credits. The US played a leading role
in securing these credits to ensure that this strategically positioned
country holds on to some sort of stability and retains ties to
the west. As a result, high stock market levels determine economic
stability, but the close interconnection of the two factors means
that political events could rapidly undermine the situation.
There are sufficient weak points. While Erdogan uses every
opportunity to curry favour with the US, the popularity of his
party is widely bound up with the fact that deputies had voted
against allowing permission for the US to use the country as a
base for its war against Iraq. The US response was hysterical
abuse of Turkey in the American press and a public appeal by deputy
US Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz to the Turkish military.
The Turkish foreign minister, Abdullah Gül, has reacted
to the latest fighting in Iraq by declaring that any dispatch
of Turkish troops was out of the question. But also
out of the question is that the U.S. is prepared to accept such
a position in the event of an emergency. Reports stating that
the Turkish military conducts surveillance of virtually the entire
Turkish population, regarding them as potential enemies of the
state, have been personally confirmed by the army chief of staff.
For its part, the government has kept quiet in the midst of a
public outcry. This demonstrates the continuing threat to democracy
and concentration of power which remains in the hands of the army.
On the other hand, recent terror attacks on British institutions
and a Free Mason Lodge has made clear that there is potential
for the emergence of Islamic extremism feeding on social misery
and anti-imperialist sentiments.
The AKP trump cardmembership of the EUis also its
Achilles heel. There is considerable resistance inside the
EU itself to Turkish membership. Following its recent losses in
regional elections the French governing UMP has issued clear reservations
about Turkish membership while the conservative opposition in
Germany has been expressing opposition for some time. Should all
the concessions made by the AKPe.g., regarding the issue
of Cyprus or the Kurdish questionprove to be in vain, then
the future of the party could be quickly under threat.
The main party to profit from opposition to the AKP in the
regional elections was the extreme right: the fascist Grey
Wolves of the MHP (National Movement Party) and the former
governing DYP (True Path Party) which, under its new chairman,
Mehmet Agar, has shifted into the camp of the extreme right. Both
organisations won more than 10 percent of the vote, with the CHP
losing votes.
The CHP had prepared the way for such forces by attacking the
government from a right-wing nationalist standpointa move
supported by sections of the trade union bureaucracy and Stalinist
groups, as well as a majority of left-wing intellectuals.
A number of leading members and deputies of the CHP have reacted
to this latest defeat by vigorously attacking the existing course
of the party and commencing a campaign in the press for renewal
and liberalisation. A comment in the conservative Zaman newspaper
of April 6 is typical: The struggle between (reformist and
social liberal) Renewalists and (pro-status quo and statist) Traditionalists
has been continuing in the CHP for a long time. The reformist
wing favours a synthesis of social democracy and a modern interpretation
of Kemalism; want the concepts of secularism and nationalism as
well as the economic philosophy of the party to be liberalized.
The traditional wing, on the other hand, advocates a return to
positions during the era of one-party rule by the CHP.
The Renewalists are appealing for precisely the sort of liberal
social democracy along the lines of Tony Blairs New
Labour and Gerhard Schröders New Centre
at a point in time where these parties have been largely discredited.
While a section of the left supports Turkish nationalism and
the army in the name of the struggle against imperialism, another
section support Kurdish nationalism. The DEHAP, the only legal
Kurdish party, had joined forces with a number of radical and
left groups as well as renowned Kemalist intellectuals to form
the SHP (Social Democratic Peoples Party)only to lose at
the hands of the AKP in the Kurdish-dominated southeast of Turkey.
DEHAP is politically close to the PKK (Kurdish Workers Party),
which recently renamed itself Kongra-Gel.
The DEHAP sought to offer its services to both the Kemalist
establishment in Turkey and the US. Leading members of the organisation
have openly expressed their support for the American occupation
of neighbouring Iraq. DEHAP has also spoken out in favour of entry
into the European Union together with accepting the financial
criteria involved. Such financial measures would have disastrous
consequences for the utterly poor and backward farming areas of
largely Kurdish southeast Turkey. Nevertheless, despite such political
concessions, a number of left-wing groups continued to support
the DEHAP.
Now, however, this alliance is threatened because Kurdish nationalists
have declared it is responsible for the poor results recorded
by DEHAP in the recent elections. The party was able to retain
its local mayors in Diyarbakir, Hakkari and Tunceli, but lost
its mayors in the Kurdish-dominated provincial capitals of Bingöl,
Siirt, Agri and Van to the AKP. Across the country the alliance
of SHP/DEHAP recorded just 4.8 percentmuch less than had
been expected.
A typical commentary was made by Mutlu Civiroglu, formerly
responsible for international relations for the predecessor of
the DEHAP, HADEP. Prior to the elections Civiroglu wrote on a
Kurdish nationalist web site: Instead of making useless
collaborations with powerless Turkish parties to prove Turkish-Kurdish
brotherhood, DEHAP should seek unity among Kurds and try
to reach all Kurds in Turkey. It can be anticipated that
such views will be increasingly heard in the near future.
See Also:
The dead end of nationalism
Turkey: Successor organization of the PKK curries favour with
US
[8 April 2004]
75 years
of the Turkish Republic
A balance sheet of Kemalism
[17 November 1998]
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