P.A. Turkey

Leaders of 6 opposition parties sign memorandum of understanding aiming to rerun to parliamentray system; a better one

Following their meeting on February 12, the leaders of six opposition parties signed the “Memorandum of Understanding on Reinforced Parliamentary System” in Ankara today (February 28).

The memorandum of understanding was signed by the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), İYİ Party, Felicity Party (SP), Democrat Party (DP), Future Party and DEVA Party at a ceremony attended by the party leaders Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, Meral Akşener, Temel Karamollaoğlu, Gültekin Uysal, Ahmet Davutoğlu and Ali Babacan, respectively.

The leaders came to the conference hall together. The meeting was also attended by nearly 700 representatives from civil society organizations, bar associations and unions as well as academics.

While the slogan of the meeting was “The Turkey of Tomorrow”, the parties’ logos were also to be seen on the main screen at the hall. The vice party chairs introduced the memorandum to the public.

‘An end to Presidential Government System’

Taking the floor first, CHP Vice Chair Muharrem Erkek answered the question of “Why is the Presidential Government System wrong?”

Criticizing the system for “causing personalization and arbitrariness in governance”, Erkek said that “it has led to an authoritarian governance by enabling the President to take the judiciary, executive and legislative under control and granting him highly wide and unrestrained powers.”

CHP’s Erkek also argued that the President, who is the member and the chair of a political party, has aggravated Turkey’s problems further. He stressed that introducing the Reinforced Parliamentary System does not mean returning to the past, but this move “aims to crown the Republic’s long-established state and Republican experience with democracy.”

‘An effective and participatory legislative body’

Taking the floor afterwards, DEVA Vice Chair Mustafa Yeneroğlu said that with the Reinforced Parliamentary System, they, as the six political parties, aim to introduce a “government system which complies with the traditions of participatory, libertarian and pluralist democracy and is based on the principle of separation of powers and effective checks and balances.”

Yeneroğlu noted that with this system, they also aim to reduce the electoral threshold from 10 to 3 percent and the parties which receive at least 1 percent of the votes at the Parliamentary elections will be able to benefit from the grants provided by the Treasury.

DEVA’s Yeneroğlu also said that the law-making processes will be democratized, signaling that the practice of enacting omnibus laws will be abolished and the President will be deprived of the veto power, which he said undermines the Parliament’s legislative functions.

Afterwards, Bülent Şahinalp from the DP, Ayhan Sefer Üstün from the Future Party, Bahadır Erdem from the İYİ Party and Bülent Kaya from the SP took the floor and talked about the proposed system.

Highlights from the memorandum

Some of the highlights from the memorandum of understanding signed by the six opposition parties are as follows:

(HA/SD)