Turkey elections: Why Europe is desperate to see Erdogan lose
11 May 2023
Erdogan has learned from bitter experience to play hard ball with European capitals
Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan
addresses his supporters during a rally ahead of the 14 May presidential
and parliamentary elections in Istanbul on 7 May 2023 (Reuters)
The Economist has surpassed itself in its clearly expressed hatred for an elected head of state, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
In its latest edition,
it casts the Turkish presidential election as the most important that
will take place this year, and claims that not just the future of Turkey but the future of democracy itself will hinge upon the result.
"Most important, in an era when strongman rule is on the rise, from
Hungary to India, the peaceful ejection of Mr Erdogan would show
democrats everywhere that strongmen can be beaten," it opines.
This is an enormously stupid thing to say.
It may have escaped The Economist’s attention but Turkey - under the
hyper presidential rule of a strongman - is a country where a free
election can still take place, in contrast to a region where
dictatorship is the norm.
And this election is free. It's ferociously populist, polarised, and
undoubtedly an uneven playing field in the access opposition parties
have to the state media. But it is free and hard-fought.
Despite the Supreme Electoral Council's decision in 2019 to cancel the initial victory of Istanbul opposition mayoral candidate, Ekrem Imamoglu, on
the grounds that the vote was too close (he won with a bigger majority
in the rerun), Turkey’s electoral system is still robust.
All parties are present at the polling stations. They are present at
every stage of the counting, transport of boxes and final count. Every
ballot paper is confirmed or objected to by every political stakeholder.
Furthermore, it will be the seventh free election that Erdogan, whom
the Economist dubs as a dictator, will have put himself through since he
was elected mayor of Istanbul in 1994.
The other dictators
The Economist has devoted six other covers to the same theme for over
a decade. All of them were aimed at Erdogan. Where are the similar
condemnations of leaders who are - by general consent - far worse than
the Turkish leader?
The Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el Sisi has just added 81 names of
human rights defenders and journalists to its "terrorism list", which
is now 6,300 strong. The list includes 32 Egyptian journalists from Al
Jazeera, Al Sharq, Mekameleen, Watan, the Rassd Network, and other news
websites critical of the government.
This is in addition to 60,000
political prisoners languishing and dying in Egyptian jails. Not a
word, not a peep from those defenders of a value-driven foreign policy
in the West.
And what about Mohammed bin Salman, Saudi Arabia's crown prince and prime minister, who had a journalist killed and dismembered, or business rivals hung upside down until they signed away their assets?
Does this colour The Economist’s view of a kingdom undergoing reform
and modernisation? The Economist is by no means alone in throwing
rational judgement out of the window about Turkey.
Der Spiegel, that paragon of German social democratic liberalism, pictured Erdogan sitting on a cracked throne behind him a crescent, the symbol of Islam, was breaking apart.
"In the 100th year of its existence, the Turkish Republic is at a
crossroads: if Erdogan is confirmed in office for a second time,
observers fear he could turn the country into a dictatorship; he could
become ruler for life, abolish elections."
Can you imagine the uproar there would have been if Der Spiegel had put Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who has allied himself with terrorists and fascists, on a fractured Jewish throne, with the Star of David breaking up behind him?
Le Point seriously - and without any intended irony - compared
Erdogan to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Both men, it argued, dream
of a restoration of empire. Both have instrumentalised religion, and
both have invaded other countries.
In Turkey’s case Le Point cites Turkey’s invasion of Northern Cyprus. This happened in 1974 when Mustafa Bulent Ecevit, a Kemalist and the CHP politician, was in power.
And then of course there is Turkey’s incursions in Syria, as well as Libya.
Am I forgetting something but are not American, Russian and Iranian
troops also in Syria? Did not all western countries support the failed
attempt to oust Bashar al-Assad? And has not Turkey just killed the last head of the Islamic State group (IS), which the western coalition are still fighting?
And in Libya was not Russia's Wagner mercenaries, the UAE, and Egypt behind the attempt to capture Tripoli, before Turkey intervened with its drones?
A European mental breakdown
This sort of commentary is not just wilfully littered with error and
omission. For Turkey, all fact-checking has been temporarily suspended.
It is also mentally unhinged.
Erdogan is now dubbed an Islamist, even though his first act when the
Muslim Brotherhood’s Mohamed Morsi came to power in Egypt was to call for secularism during his visit to Cairo.
Can you imagine the uproar there would have been if Der Spiegel had
put Netanyahu on a fractured Jewish throne, with the Star of David
breaking up behind him?
The truth notwithstanding, all manner of satanic force is now placed
on his shoulders. He is deemed to threaten Europe’s democracy not merely
because he is labelled an autocrat, but because he is Muslim.
This commentary reveals a European mindset in the throes of a mental
breakdown. A psychiatrist would find this delirium richly informative.
To return to planet Earth for just one moment, Erdogan could well lose the presidential election.
If - as expected - he fails to win an outright majority in the first
round on Sunday and opposition parties gain control of parliament, much
would then depend on how the votes of the other parties split.
This election is indeed the tightest he
has faced for 20 years. The opinion polls which have under law stopped
being published in Turkey put the two main candidates as neck-and-neck and are all within the margin of error.
If Erdogan does lose, it will be because of inflation and the rising cost of living which has materially affected purchasing power, and for this he has only himself to blame.
He has gone through three central bankers in the process of pursuing a policy on interest rates which is untenable and has begun to empty Turkey's foreign exchange and gold reserves.
He may indeed signal a new and more orthodox monetary policy after
the elections, but if he loses it is "the economy, stupid" not his
authoritarianism that would have led to his downfall.
For the last segment of his period of office, Erdogan represented stability. In 2018 Turkey voted for stability over change. Now its been reversed. Turks want change. A whole generation has been moved up the social ladder and entered the middle class.
Now the sons and daughters of AK party loyalists are doctors and
engineers who cannot afford the rent in Istanbul and who are in the
midst of a real cost of living crisis. They yearn for opportunity and
advancement, based on merit rather than political connection.
A one-man show
Presidential government under Erdogan has become a system where one
man micromanages a huge government and civil service machine. His
signature is required on the appointment of almost the bottom rung of
the executive chain, invalidating the signatories of immediate
superiors. Much indeed has to change.
Turkey elections: After two decades of AKP rule, a showdown looms
Read More »
Kilicdaroglu’s story of a return to parliamentary democracy and
stronger institutions that are independent of the political power is
appealing.
But for the moment, it is just that, a story.
Beneath him run powerful and less attractive currents to a European liberal audience, such as the populist racism of the CHP politicians being directed at Syrian refugees and Arab speakers in general, racism that was on show in the terrible aftermath of the recent earthquakes.
Kilicdaroglu has promised the earth, not least visa-free travel to Schengen countries within three months of gaining office. But so too did Erdogan arrive on the political stage committed to gaining entry to Europe, and so too did Erdogan come close in 2016 to negotiating a deal on visa-free travel.
Erdogan has learned from bitter experience to play hard ball with
European capitals. As everyone who has studied the subject knows, the
barrier to Europe does not lie in Turkey.
As far back as 1992 - 11 years before Erdogan came to power - Germany
was sending mixed messages on Turkey joining the EU. Publicly,
Germany's Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel assured his counterpart that the federal republic backed Turkish entry.
Turkey's opposition alliance leaders held a large political
campaign rally in the Maltepe district for Istanbul, Turkey on 6 May,
2023 (Reuters)
Privately however, the then Chancellor Helmut Kohl, according to
confidential papers published by the Institute of Contemporary History
in Munich, revealed to Norwegian Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland
during his visit to Oslo: "We are against it."
And this was under Kohl, when liberal democracy was booming and good
for business. Just imagine what the very thought of Turkey’s membership
would be like today with the extreme right on the march in Germany,
Italy, France, and Eastern Europe.
A barrage of hostility
Hatred of Islam and suspicion of Muslims has entered the political mainstream in Europe.
No one gets denounced, no political careers come to a premature end
for anyone who taps into this rich stream of white nationalism.
On the contrary.
Kilicdaroglu is honoured to be thought of as Turkey’s Olaf Scholz
in an interview on German TV. No doubt he is pleased be called Turkey’s
Joe Biden too. In power, he will learn to rue these comparisons by a
Turkish electorate who believed his promises and became quickly
disillusioned.
Erdogan’s very flawed presidency is still light years ahead of what
happens in Arab countries whose leaders declare arrogantly that their
people are not mature enough or ready for free elections
He will learn the hard way that the real reason the West has
expressed such hostility to Erdogan has nothing to do with his
authoritarianism or his crackdown on a free press - neither of which
stop the rush to invest in Saudi Arabia where such concepts are for the
birds.
It is because Erdogan has fashioned Turkey into an independent state
with its own powerful armed forces, that will not automatically toe the
line dictated to it. This is the reason he has so many enemies in the
West.
His popularity as a leader in the Sunni Muslim world is a threat to
the failing and ailing western consensus. Independent leaders like Morsi
or Pakistan’s Imran Khan all meet the same fate.
Erdogan has bucked that trend - so far.
He is crucified for being too close to Putin, and yet Turkey is one of the few countries in the region that can negotiate prisoner exchanges between Ukraine and Russia and keep the grain deal going, although possibly not for that much longer.
If the promised Ukrainian counter offensive
falters, and Biden’s appetite for continuing to supply Kyiv with the
rockets and shells it requires falters with it, it will be back to
Ankara to arrange talks between the two sides.
Once again Turkey’s neutrality in this conflict will not be so unappealing to Western Europe.
Most analysis is predicated on the possibility that Erdogan will
lose. But there are many scenarios left where he could win. The barrage
of hostility from Europe has not gone unnoticed in Turkey.
When Erdogan called a mass rally in Istanbul’s old Ataturk airport, hundreds of thousands
turned up. The figures may be disputed but the size of the throng
surprised everyone in what is now an opposition-controlled city.
Democracy in action
If Erdogan does win, it will be because he persuaded the conservative
voter to come back to the ruling Justice and Development Party
(AKP) fold. These are not voters that readily surface in opinion polls,
as they would not be living in large cities. But they still hold huge
power in elections.
Kilicdaroglu’s strategy of splitting the conservative vote by getting
on board two men who were Erdogan’s bedfellows in his first period of
power, former Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and former Foreign Minister Ali Babajan, will have failed.
If, as expected, the election goes to a second round, Erdogan still
has cards to play, not least the appointment of two or more vice
presidents who are established heavyweights in monetary and foreign
policy. Kilicdaroglu on the other would have played his most important
cards.
This is Turkish democracy in action. It's rough around the edges, it
is missing for large periods between elections. There is much in the
presidential system that needs changing. I, myself, was against it from
the start.
I argued then that Turkey needs a robust and independent media. It
needs independent institutions. Ministers need to be scrutinised by
parliament, and not treated by the president as his private secretaries.
It needs an independent central bank that commands the respect of the
markets.
But Erdogan’s very flawed presidency is still light years ahead of
what happens in the Arab countries whose leaders declare arrogantly that
their people are not mature enough or ready for free elections.
Europe prays for Erdogan's downfall. In so doing, it is giving the
Turks the biggest reason why they should make their own minds up, if
they want to keep the independence for which their country has struggled
for so long and so hard.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do
not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Eye.