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  • Turkey's Choice

    June 2, 2011

    Turkey's Choice

    By KATINKA BARYSCH


    LONDON - Turkey's election in 2007 was preceded by threats of a
    military coup. The 2002 one was overshadowed by an economic meltdown.
    This year's poll, scheduled for June 12, could have signaled a move
    toward political normality. However, a nasty sex-tape scandal and a
    flare-up of violence in the Kurdish southeast have not only poisoned
    the political atmosphere but also fueled allegations that the
    governing Justice and Development Party (AKP) wants to grab ever more
    power.

    Polls have left little doubt that the AKP will win its third
    consecutive election in June as voters reward Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan for presiding over years of economic growth, relative
    political stability and Turkey's growing international stature.

    But Erdogan wants not only to stay in government, he wants to gain
    enough seats in the Parliament to push through a new constitution
    without having to compromise with the opposition. Since the AKP's
    share of the vote stands at around 43-45 percent, Erdogan can hope for
    a supermajority only if the smaller of the two main opposition
    parties, the rightist Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) fails to pass
    the 10 percent bar for entry to the Parliament.

    Once commended for his initiatives to make up with Armenia and to give
    Turkey's Kurds more minority rights, Erdogan has now adopted a
    nationalist tone to lure voters away from the MHP.

    His chances of doing so seemed to increase in late May when videos
    appeared on the Internet showing leading MHP politicians in
    compromising situations. There is no indication that the AKP was
    involved, but the fact is that the party could be the main
    beneficiary.

    Meanwhile, the electoral commission sought to bar a handful of leading
    Kurdish politicians from running, which led to widespread
    demonstrations in the southeast and raised doubts how many seats the
    Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) would be able to gain.

    While Erdogan is moving to the right, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, leader of
    the main opposition party, the nationalist-secularist People's
    Republican Party (CHP) is trying a different gamble. Rather than
    accusing the AKP of seeking to Islamize Turkey, Kilicdaroglu has
    campaigned on economic opening and social safety. He has even mooted
    more autonomy for the Kurdish regions - something that may not go down
    well with the CHP's traditional electorate.

    Against the background of scandals, violence and shifting party
    programs, it is hard to predict whether Erdogan's reach for a
    supermajority will succeed. For the sake of Turkish democracy, it
    would be better if it did not.

    Turkey does need a new, more democratic constitution. But if the AKP
    gains 330 of the 550 seats, it will be able to push through a
    constitutional draft without support from the opposition and put it
    straight to a referendum. (If the AKP gained 367 seats, it could even
    to adopt the constitution in a parliamentary vote.) A `one-party'
    constitution would lead to further divisions in Turkey's
    already-polarized political system. The opposition parties, together
    representing half of Turkey's electorate, might well boycott a
    constitutional process dominated by the AKP.

    Even among AKP supporters there might not be much debate: Erdogan has
    single-handedly struck 220 of the current 334 AKP MPs off the
    candidates' list and replaced them with little-known loyalists. In a
    party that was once proud of its local roots, the top-down sweep has
    left many members cross.

    Many observers suspect that Erdogan's main objective in the new
    constitution is to move Turkey from a parliamentary to a presidential
    system along French lines. Already, the AKP has amended the current
    Constitution so that future presidents will no longer be elected by
    Parliament but by the people. The new constitution would presumably
    give the presidency bigger powers, commensurate with its popular
    mandate.

    Most Turks expect that Erdogan himself will want to become president
    when Abdullah Gul's term expires.

    In Turkey's already highly centralized system, a move toward a
    presidential system does not look like a good idea. It could lead
    either to rivalry and paralysis between a strengthened president and a
    traditionally powerful prime minister, both backed by a popular
    mandate. Or it could further erode checks and balances and reinforce
    autocratic tendencies.

    In either case, Turkey's chances of getting through its daunting to-do
    list, from improving the judiciary to creating jobs for an eager young
    population, would diminish. So would its hopes of entering the
    European Union, which would require a strengthening of democracy and
    many of economic and legal reforms. Sex scandals and local violence
    should not distract from the fact that Turkey's future might be at
    stake at this election.

    Katinka Barysch is deputy director of the Centre for European Reform in London.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/03/opinion/03iht-edbarysch03.html?ref=global


    From: Baghdasarian
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