P.A. Turkey

Murat Yetkin: Ineffective Turkish opposition: reality or urban legend?

Republican People’s Party (CHP) leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu appeared last week on Global TV, with host Buket Aydın, who had ironically laughed during an interview on Kanal D, another private broadcaster, in 2019 when the main opposition leader claimed that his party would win the mayor seats in major big cities. The CHP actually won the big cities in the 2019 local elections with one expectation on Kılıçdaroğlu’s list.

Kılıçdaroğlu began the program by mocking the host. And when Aydın asked him if he would run for the presidency in 2023, Kılıçdaroğlu gently asked her to laugh again, saying that her laughter was a charm for his party. The CHP leader said he would run for the top seat if there is consensus in the Nation’s Alliance – an election alliance mainly consist of his party and İYİ Party.

Kılıçdaorğlu’s answer was an indicator that his and the opposition’s self-confidence passed a threshold. It was also a response to a popular claim that the opposition in Turkey is “ineffective.”

This claim that President Erdoğan would lose in elections if there was an effective opposition is wrong first of all because it downgrades the political power of Erdoğan and his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP).

Erdoğan himself frequently says that he is the one who wants a strong opposition the most. We will look at whether if this is his sincere thought or is it a move targeting the perception of the voters just to build unconfidence in the opposition parties.

The economic conditions in the country are getting harder, the government seems to be losing the grip of the pandemic and to be honest, the opposition is playing tough.

 

Is the opposition really ineffective?

The perception that the opposition is doing nothing does not only belong to the AKP circles but also the influential opinion leaders in the digital and social media. They ask why the CHP and the İYİ Party aren’t presenting an effective opposition and the question reads as why aren’t they calling on the people to the streets. The purpose of the government circles is obvious, they want to keep a discourse of coup threat through uprising handy.

Besides, it is clear that the police and gendarmerie have dispersed even the smallest oppositional demonstration with disproportionate use of force since the 2013 Gezi Park protests. Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and Meral Akşenen are right in not wanting to expose the crowds to such a risk.

 

 

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So what is the opposition doing?

 

 

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“Where’s the $128 billion?” campaign

It is rumored that Erdoğan’s decision remove Central Bank Gov. Naci Ağbal from his seat only four and a half months after he was appointed because he wanted to inspect the issue on insistence by the opposition. The CHP informs the public about the issue with posters in all cities.

 

 

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Istanbul Convention, Kanal Istanbul, HDP

 

Face-to-face contact with the public

Akşener especially collects credits due to her personal contact with the public. Her visits to tradesmen are also widely featured on social media. In addition, Babacan and Davutoğlu are on the streets at places where the CHP is not very influential. The AKP’s preference for organizations such as conventions and openings of public works rather than face-to-face contact with the masses changes the roles in politics. Moreover, all these come at a time when not only the critical and opposition press, but also opposition politicians face charges of terrorism, espionage, or threats of being tried, stripped off the lawmaker status, imprisonment, and physical attack.

The opposition is also producing new political actors in this process. CHP Istanbul provincial chair Canan Kaftancıoğlu in the field and İYİ Party Isparta Deputy Aylin Cesur in parliament are good examples of that.

Kılıçdaroğlu, who faced several physical attacks, holds face-to-face meetings with civil society, professional organizations and pressure groups that the CHP did not have access to before. The opportunities that emerged after the 2019 local elections also play a role here.

Looking at this picture, the discourse that there isn’t an effective opposition in Turkey is not true and it only serves to discredit the effort of the opposition.

 

 

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