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ANKARA: Nationalist Mvt Party (MHP) would become 3rd largest in NA

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  • ANKARA: Nationalist Mvt Party (MHP) would become 3rd largest in NA

    Sabah, Turkey
    Feb 9 2007

    Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) would become the third largest party
    in parliament


    Turkey's far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) would become the
    third largest party in parliament after this year's election, a
    survey published on Friday showed.

    The poll, conducted by Selcuk University in the central city
    of Konya and carried in several newspapers, showed the ruling AK
    Party would again be the largest party with 31.6 percent. The
    MHP would win 14.2 percent, the poll showed.

    The main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP),
    nominally left-leaning but also nationalist-minded, would win
    15.5 percent in the election, which must be held by November.
    Only parties with more than 10 percent can enter parliament.
    The MHP is not represented in the current parliament.
    Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan's AK Party has presided over
    strong economic growth and the launch of Turkey's European Union
    entry talks since taking power in November 2002, but analysts say the
    more nationalist mood is now forcing it to shelve
    liberal political reforms and some planned privatisations.

    If the AK Party fails to win an outright majority in the
    2007 election, it will have to form a coalition, possibly with
    one of the smaller nationalist parties -- a move sure to further
    complicate Ankara's already troubled relations with the EU.
    Friday's poll also showed more than half of Turks are
    opposed to the scrapping of a law which makes it a crime to
    insult Turkish national identity or state institutions.
    The EU has sharply criticised Article 301, which has
    triggered court cases against dozens of writers including Nobel
    Laureate Orhan Pamuk and Turkish Armenian editor Hrant Dink.
    An ultra-nationalist youth shot Dink dead outside his
    newspaper office in Istanbul last month. About 100,000 people
    attended his funeral to protest against violent nationalism.
    Friday's poll, mirroring the findings of other recent
    surveys, showed a majority of voters who support the AK Party donot
    want Erdogan to run for the presidency when incumbent AhmetNecdet
    Sezer retires in May.

    It gave no reason, but many think the AK Party will lose
    votes if Erdogan, their main electoral asset, quits. As
    president he would have to stay above party politics.
    The poll showed Erdogan remained the single most popular
    candidate to replace Sezer, with 17.1 percent support, but he
    was only narrowly ahead of Bulent Arinc, the speaker of
    parliament and also from the AK Party, who had 16.8 percent.
    Both Erdogan and Arinc are unacceptable to Turkey's secular
    establishment, including the powerful military, because of their
    roots in political Islam. Their wives wear the Muslim headscarf.
    The poll canvassed the views of 7,325 people in 43 cities.
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