Erdoğan and Kılıçdaroğlu square up for likely 2nd-round clash in Turkey

Authored by politico.eu and submitted by TheGruntingGoat
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ISTANBUL — A singing, grinning President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan told supporters he was ready to fight a second round in Turkey’s election on May 28, sensing he had the momentum to beat his rival Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who undershot expectations in Sunday’s first round.

With 92 percent of votes counted, Turkey’s Supreme Election Council said in the early hours of Monday that Erdoğan had won 49.49 percent of the vote, only narrowly shy of the 50 percent needed for an outright win. Kılıçdaroğlu had secured 44.79 percent, disappointing a poll consensus that he had a narrow lead.

A veteran electoral campaigner, a grandstanding Erdoğan appeared on a balcony of his AK party headquarters in Ankara with a microphone singing: “We love you so much” to the crowd and praising them for the “feast of democracy” they had just served up. Dismissing the opposition’s claims of foul play, he even predicted the final trickle of results on Sunday could push him over the 50 percent needed for another five-year stint in power.

Mocking Kılıçdaroğlu, who had filmed in his campaign ads in his modest kitchen, he said: “Some people are in the kitchen, we are on the balcony.”

“We don’t know whether the presidential election will be finished in the first round. If it ends in this round then there is no issue. If our people have decided to finish it in the second round then that’s most welcome too. We believe we will finish the election in the first round successfully.”

A visibly angry Kılıçdaroğlu, whose party accused Erdoğan’s camp of widespread electoral malpractice overnight, snapped back: “Despite all his slander and insults Erdoğan could not get the result he expected. The election cannot be won on the balcony. Data is still coming in.”

“If our people say there’s a second round, we will respect that,” the 74-year-old former bureaucrat added. “We will definitely win this election in the second round … Erdoğan didn’t win the vote of confidence he was expecting … In the next 15 days we will fight for rights, laws and justice in this country.”

The prospect of a second round will focus attention on where the 5 percent who voted for Sinan Oğan — a former nationalist parliamentarian running as an independent — will take their votes on May 28.

Turkey’s presidential election has turned into one of the world’s most closely watched political contests this year because of the massive implications both for the future of democracy in the NATO member of 85 million people and for security in Europe and the Middle East.

Heading into the vote, the increasingly authoritarian Erdoğan looked more vulnerable than at any time over his 20-year dominance of Turkey’s politics because of a blazing cost of living crisis, which has pushed the prices of many staples such as onions, meat and cucumbers out of the reach of many consumers.

Adding to his woes, Erdoğan has also found himself pitted against a united six-party opposition under Kılıçdaroğlu, whose presidential candidacy was also supported by the pro-Kurdish HDP party.

However, the Islamist populist is able to rely on a strong conservative base and is still held in high esteem because of his massive infrastructure and welfare programs, along with his increased positioning of Turkey as a geopolitical heavyweight.

Despite Erdoğan saying he was on course to win by a hefty margin, the opposition has been predicting it would narrow the gap because of the number of votes still to come from big cities where it is stronger. Kılıçdaroğlu accused government electoral observers of deliberately avoiding adding large numbers of votes from polling stations in opposition strongholds, by continually contesting the count there.

He said 300 ballot boxes were being held up in Ankara, and 783 in Istanbul. “They are blocking the system at the ballot boxes where our votes are high with repeated objections,” he complained. “Don’t be afraid of the people’s will. Don’t block the people’s will. I call on democracy workers in the field not to leave the ballot boxes. We are here until every vote is counted.”

In a sign of the furor over the degree to which the AK party was demanding recounts, Yunus Başaran, a candidate for the Workers’ Party of Turkey from the southern coastal city of Antalya, said some ballot boxes had been counted seven times. “This time they’ve found this path,” he said.

Journalist Nevșin Mengü tweeted she had information that in the Ankara neighborhood of Çankaya — a traditional opposition bastion — one ballot box had been counted 11 times. Alper Taşdelen, mayor of Çankaya, said almost all of the ballot boxes there were being contested.

From early evening on Sunday, the counting of the results triggered a bitter political debate, with the opposition accusing Erdoğan’s AK party of several forms of electoral skulduggery.

Two of Turkey’s most senior opposition politicians, Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu and Ankara Mayor Mansur Yavaş, cried foul over the way the state-run Anadolu news agency was reporting results. This is a highly sensitive topic as Anadolu’s feed is widely used by TV channels for their live election coverage. Initially, Anadolu had put Erdoğan on course for a 54 percent to 40 percent win.

The mayors said the agency was giving an exaggerated picture of Erdoğan’s lead early in the evening by cherry-picking results only from districts where the AK party was strong. The intention was to dishearten electoral observers from the opposition camp, who would leave before all ballots had been counted, which would allow ballots to potentially be manipulated.

Kılıçdaroğlu’s opposition vowed that their officials would stay up to head off the problem. Slamming the public announcement of the results by the Anadolu agency as a “fiction,” opposition leader Kılıçdaroğlu called on his teams to stay vigilant. “We will not sleep tonight,” he said.

The opposition mayors pointed out that Anadolu had resorted to the same tactic in the mayoral elections of 2019, initially saying the votes meant the AK party was on course for big wins, while the opposition eventually took Istanbul and Ankara in late counting.

Erdoğan and his AK party officials accused the opposition of deceit, and using the fraud accusation as an excuse for losing.

“Our nation has made its decision. You don’t need to find new excuses. We will see our nation’s will when we have the final results.”

kleusc on May 14th, 2023 at 19:57 UTC »

What Erdogan doing is basically calling for recount repeatedly on ballot boxes where opposition potentially wins by landslide and preventing them long enough muddle the waters.

green_flash on May 14th, 2023 at 19:33 UTC »

To be clear about what they are criticizing:

Anadolu’s early numbers are highly contentious because they are widely used as the feed for live election coverage on TV. The opposition argues the state agency is deliberately releasing data from electoral districts in favor of Erdoğan and his AK party first — and holding back numbers on opposition ballots — so that election observers might lose heart and not wait for every last vote to be counted. For this reason, the opposition is insisting that its election observers must stay in place until all the ballots are counted to prevent any manipulation.

You see in this picture how off the state media ballot count still is compared to other sources: https://i.imgur.com/j1mZAbK.png

It also seems that a lot of ballots are being challenged by the AKP in areas where the opposition is strong.

We're currently at 50 million ballots counted with Erdogan leading by somewhere between 2 and 2.5 million. Imamoglu says 7.5 million ballots have yet to be added and those are mostly from areas where the opposition is strong, so it could even be that at the end of the day Kilicdaroglu will be ahead.

WhySoWorried on May 14th, 2023 at 18:24 UTC »

Where's a good place to get a live count? I'm quite interested in the results of this election for all my Turkish friends.