Erdogan continues to haunt Istanbul mayor  E. Imamoglu

Turkey’s opposition, still reeling from election defeat to President Tayyip Erdogan, suffered a fresh blow to its prospects of renewal on Thursday as a court began hearing a case against one of its brightest stars on a tender-rigging charge.

A new indictment has been prepared against Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu following a report filed by the Interior Ministry. The prosecutors accuse him of “using fraud in tender” during his reign as Beylikdüzü mayor and ask from three to seven years in prison for the politician.

 

Imamoglu is currently vying for the chairmanship of CHP and is certain to run a second time for the mayorship in March 2024 local elections. The opposition cries  that the case is political.

The case against Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu began less than three weeks after Erdogan defied poll predictions and the hopes of his opponents to win a presidential runoff vote, extending his more than two-decade rule, writes Reuters.

 

Imamoglu faces a potential jail sentence of three to seven years and a political ban if found guilty in the latest case, having already been sentenced to more than two years in prison in 2022 for insulting public officials. He also faces a political ban if that ruling is upheld.

 

His case on Thursday was adjourned to Nov. 30 and the trial is set to hang over the opposition as it tries to regroup and rally disheartened voters ahead of local elections in March.

 

At the same time, calls have grown louder for the opposition’s defeated presidential candidate Kemal Kilicdaroglu to resign as chairman of Imamoglu’s Republican People’s Party (CHP).

 

While Kilicdaroglu has refused to openly say whether he will stand as a candidate in the party congress in the autumn, he appeared to suggest that he may step down after 13 years at the helm of Turkey’s oldest party, through a majority of Turkish experts think he wants to stay at the helm at least until after the 2024 local elections.

 

“I will open the way fully for change, don’t you worry,” he told his party’s parliamentary group on Tuesday. “It is the captain’s duty to take the ship safely back to port,” Kilicdaroglu added, suggesting he could keep the reins for a while longer.

 

Many see Imamoglu, who has called for “total change”, as the strongest contender to replace Kilicdaroglu.

 

“We can’t make the mistake of doing the same things and continuing on our path,” Imamoglu told reporters last week, citing the CHP’s losses in the last three presidential election.

 

But others are also vying for Kilicdaroglu’s position and the decision will depend on who can rally more support within the party.

 

Tanju Tosun, political science professor at Ege University, said the CHP’s internal politics could overshadow its preparations for next year’s local elections.

 

“If the internal rifts within the CHP continues until local elections, candidates from the ruling AK Party (AKP) could defeat opposition candidates in many cities,” he said.

Imamoglu shot to the centre of domestic politics after he won the 2019 mayoral elections in Istanbul, delivering Erdogan’s AKP their biggest defeat since they came to power in 2002. He has been very  active in the campaign trail, with his rallies drawing record crowds and CHP edged out AKP in his hometown of Istanbul first time in 30 years in the presidential polling.

 

Erdogan’s critics say he has bent Turkish courts to his will and many see the cases against Imamoglu as an attempt to hinder him politically. Erdogan and his AK Party deny this.

 

Kemal Polat, a lawyer for Imamoglu, said the claims in Thursday’s tender rigging case, related to his time as mayor of Beylikduzu district, were baseless and could be used by politicians.

 

“The indictment that is prepared is empty judicially. The investigation into the acts described in the indictment were lifted by the Council of State,” Polat said.

 

LOCAL ELECTIONS

 

As Imamoglu’s five-year term draws to a close, the CHP and other opposition parties it cooperated with in 2019 to secure the victory in Istanbul will also need to decide whether they will unite again for local elections scheduled for March 2024.

 

Last month’s defeat, including a weaker-than-expected showing for the centre nationalist IYI Party in parliamentary elections, complicates the prospects of another partnership.

 

Reports have suggested that IYI Party may request the CHP support its candidate in some metropolitan cities like in 2019, but in CHP strongholds this time.

 

In 2019, the CHP endorsed IYI Party candidates in the western cities of Balikesir and Denizli, but they failed to beat AKP candidates at the time.

 

The pro-Kurdish Green Left Party’s (YSP) role also remains key for victory in local elections after they helped the CHP claim Istanbul and Ankara in 2019 by not fielding candidates.

 

But party officials have suggested they may not follow that strategy next year after they suffered a drop in their votes in last month’s elections.

 

“YSP may field candidates (in Istanbul and Ankara),” Meral Danis Bestas, a senior YSP official, said. “We’ve received tough criticisms from our party base for not fielding a candidate in the presidential elections.”

 

 

Imamoglu stated that his relationship with Kilicdaroglu is cordial and productive. He expects Kilicdaroglu to make a statement  next week clarifying his position at the head of the party and the role he intends for Imamoglu. Some experts think if Imamoglu is denied a chance for chairmanship, he could split from CHP starting a new political movement based on change and a more Islamic social democracy agenda, though the details of such a vison need to be articulated.

 

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Published By: Atilla Yeşilada

GlobalSource Partners’ Turkey Country Analyst Atilla Yesilada is the country’s leading political analyst and commentator. He is known throughout the finance and political science world for his thorough and outspoken coverage of Turkey’s political and financial developments. In addition to his extensive writing schedule, he is often called upon to provide his political expertise on major radio and television channels. Based in Istanbul, Atilla is co-founder of the information platform Istanbul Analytics and is one of GlobalSource’s local partners in Turkey. In addition to his consulting work and speaking engagements throughout the US, Europe and the Middle East, he writes regular columns for Turkey’s leading financial websites VATAN and www.paraanaliz.com and has contributed to the financial daily Referans and the liberal daily Radikal.