Turkish election: Erdogan to extend rule into third decade after victory in run-off

Incumbent candidate secured 52.1% of vote, with gap of 2 million votes between president and rival

Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan has extended his rule into a third decade, comfortably beating his rival Kemal Kılıcdaroglu on Sunday in an acrimonious run-off election.

Mr Erdogan had secured about 52.1 per cent of the vote with almost all the counting complete, according to Turkey’s election board, putting him significantly ahead of Mr Kılıcdaroglu on 47.9 per cent.

The run-off victory caps an extraordinary campaign for Mr Erdogan, who went into this election cycle at his most vulnerable since he first became Turkey’s leader in 2003, with the country gripped by an acute cost of living crisis and an opposition at its most organised in years.

“Without making any concession in our democracy, development or goals, we’ve opened the door to the century of Turkey together,” Mr Erdogan said in a victory speech in Istanbul on Sunday evening, delivered from atop a bus to raucous applause from supporters standing below.

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“What did I tell you?” he added. “We will be together to the grave.”

Sunday’s second-round vote was billed by Erdogan and Kılıcdaroglu, who led a six-party alliance, as a referendum on Turkey’s future, exactly 100 years after the republic was founded by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.

But he presides over an economy that is under increasing strain. The lira hit a record low on Friday, while the country’s dollar bonds were hit hard over the past fortnight and costs to insure against a debt default lurched higher.

Investors and economists say they are particularly worried by a big slide in Turkey’s foreign exchange reserves, which accelerated ahead of the first round of elections on May 14th.

The opposition had also warned that another five-year term for Mr Erdogan, who has towered over Turkey like no other politician since Atatürk, would send the country irreversibly down a path where democracy and human rights were steadily eroded. The long-time leader, who has centralised power in an executive presidency, accused his opponents of aligning with terrorists and the west at Turkey’s expense.

Mr Erdogan also took a hard line on foreign policy ahead of the vote, pushing back against Sweden’s accession to Nato despite pressure from allies.

Mr Erdogan emphasised family values, the battle against terrorism and Turkey’s growing role on the world stage in a series of fiery campaign rallies that helped to galvanise support among conservative, pious voters. He also launched repeated personal attacks against Mr Kılıcdaroglu, including in his victory speech on Sunday.

Backing from Mr Erdogan’s base in Turkey’s Anatolian heartland helped the president exceed expectations in the first round, in which he defied polls to edge Kılıcdaroglu into second place, although neither candidate gained the more than 50 per cent of the voted needed to win outright.

Going into that vote, Turkey’s opposition was brimming with confidence that scorching inflation and the government’s stuttering response to the devastating earthquake in February could carry them to victory.

Mr Erdogan’s president’s bloc, a coalition that includes his Islamist-rooted Justice and Development party and the Nationalist Movement party, also held on to its majority in parliament in a legislative vote on May 14th.

Mr Kılıcdaroglu (74) had vowed to revive the economy by reversing many of Erdogan’s policies, while also bringing Turkey back to a parliamentary democracy from the executive presidency system that was put in place after a referendum in 2017.

After the disappointing first-round performance, Mr Kılıcdaroglu switched from a campaign that promised “spring will come” to harsher nationalist, anti-immigration rhetoric. He was dealt a further blow when Sinan Oğan, the nationalist power broker who finished third in the first round, threw his support behind Erdogan.

Speaking after the release of unofficial results on Sunday, Mr Kılıcdaroglu promised to “continue to fight until real democracy comes to our country”.

“In this election, the will of the people to change the authoritarian government emerged despite all the pressures,” he said.

International election observers said the first-round vote was broadly free but they noted that the campaigns had been far from fair. Mr Erdogan leant heavily on state resources, providing giveaways such as free gas and 10GB of internet for students. He also boosted pay for public sector workers and increased the minimum wage.

The country’s media, which is largely affiliated with the government, has provided wall-to-wall coverage of Mr Erdogan events, including the opening of a Black Sea gas facility and the inauguration of a warship. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2023