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ANKARA: Nearly 40 Percent Of Young AK Party Voters Are 'Kemalist'

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  • ANKARA: Nearly 40 Percent Of Young AK Party Voters Are 'Kemalist'

    NEARLY 40 PERCENT OF YOUNG AK PARTY VOTERS ARE 'KEMALIST'

    Today's Zaman
    July 22 2009
    Turkey

    Thirty-eight out of every 100 young persons who voted for the Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party), a conservative political party,
    define themselves as "Ataturkist-Kemalist," a survey conducted by
    Selcuk Sirin, a professor at New York University and Bahcesehir
    University, has reported.

    The results of the "Young Identities Research" were announced yesterday
    at the Besiktas campus of Bahcesehir University. The surprising
    results pointed to widespread diversity among the voters of the AK
    Party. Fourteen percent of those surveyed who voted for the staunchly
    secularist Republican People's Party (CHP) identified themselves as
    members of the "Islamic segment" of society.

    The survey was conducted among 1,403 young people between the ages
    of 18 and 25, 60 percent of whom are university students across 52
    provinces, 253 smaller districts and some villages. According to the
    "multi-faceted political belongingness analysis," 78 out of every 100
    young persons who voted for the AK Party said they were part of the
    "Islamic segment," while 65 percent said they were conservative and
    38 percent said they were "Ataturkist-Kemalist."

    Eighty-nine percent of CHP voters surveyed defined themselves as
    "Kemalist-Ataturkist," 60 percent as "leftist or social democrat"
    and 14 percent identified themselves as a member of the Islamic
    segment. Five percent of respondents said they were of Armenian
    descent.

    Sirin interpreted the results as an indicator that young people today
    are free to express their political identities, noting that today's
    youth was not raised with the fears of the previous generation. Sirin
    said he believed Turkey's future looks promising, based on the survey's
    results. He also said in Turkey, politics was involved in daily life
    much more than was necessary, stating that people tended to treat
    one's political identity as part of one's personality.
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