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Turkey confirms new election date as November 1

Turkey confirms new election date as November 1
Turkish elections will take place on 1 November after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called for snap elections Monday after an inconclusive vote in June and the collapse of coalition-building efforts.
4 min read
25 August, 2015
Ahmet Davutoglu has been appointed to form an interim government [Anadolu]
Turkey has announced elections will take place on 1 November.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called for a new election following an inconclusive vote in June and the collapse of coalition-building efforts.

Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu will form an interim government to lead the country into the new election after being selected by Erdogan Tuesday.

Davutoglu has five days to form a temporary Cabinet that would include legislators from opposition parties and oversee the new election. Two main opposition parties however, have already ruled out participating in the interim administration.


The opposition accuses Erdogan of triggering a new election in the hope that the ruling party, which he founded, can win back the parliamentary majority it lost in June.

Erdogan on Monday called snap elections in an unprecedented move to break weeks of political stalemate after June's inconclusive legislative polls.

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), co-founded by Erdogan, lost its overall majority in the 550-seat parliament in the 7 June polls for the first time since it came to power in 2002, forcing the party to seek a coalition partner.


But the AKP's coalition talks with opposition parties failed to produce a government, an outcome critics say the combative Erdogan sought all along.

     Erdogan wants the AKP to win back an overall majority and govern alone.


"In line with the constitution, Mr President has decided that the Turkish parliament will undergo renewed elections," the presidency said in a statement.

It said Erdogan was exercising his rightful powers to call the polls after no coalition was formed within a 45-day deadline.

This is the first time in the history of modern Turkey that parties have failed to form a coalition after elections and repeat polls have been called.


Erdogan wants the AKP to win back an overall majority and govern alone.

He is also seeking to fulfil his dream of a revamped presidency with boosted executive powers, which will require a majority of at least three fifths.

The president indicated in recent weeks that he was not in favour of coalition governments, but dismissed criticism that he had impeded the coalition negotiations.

Under Turkey's constitution, Erdogan was obliged to give the second-placed Republican People's Party (CHP) a mandate to lead coalition talks.

But he refused to do so because the CHP's leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu refuses to set foot in Erdogan's controversial new presidential palace.

The opposition has accused Erdogan of violating the constitution, with Kilicdaroglu blasting the president for seeking to stage a "civilian coup". 


'Dead in the water'


The opposition CHP and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) have refused to take part in a short-term election government.

     The elections will come at a time of a dual offensive against Kurdish militants and Islamic State jihadists.


This forces Davutoglu to hold talks with the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) - which he has accused of being a front for Kurdish militants from the outlawed PKK - as well as independent figures to form an interim government.

It remains to be seen if November's polls will see the AKP increase its share of vote and win back an outright majority, with many analysts sceptical that the results will be much changed from June 7.

Marc Pierini, visiting scholar at Carnegie Europe, said the AKP has a chance of winning back its simple majority but would be unable to win the three-fifths of seats needed to call a referendum to change the constitution and give Erdogan the broader powers he craves.

"With 258 seats, the AKP was 18 seats short of a single-party government. On 1 November, they may recoup that loss and be back in power alone," he said.

"But 258 was very, very far from the 330 seats qualified (three-fifths) majority, so the executive presidency reform is dead in the water," he said.

The elections will come at a time of a dual offensive against Kurdish militants and Islamic State jihadists in Iraq and Syria, with some critics blaming Erdogan for operating a "war machine" to seek political gains for his AKP.

A spike in violence between Turkish security forces and Kurdish militants has nullified a 2013 ceasefire with the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), which is designated as a terrorist organisation by Turkey and much of the international community.

At least 814 Kurdish militants have been killed in Turkey and in neighbouring Iraq while at least 60 members of the Turkish security forces have lost their lives in over one month of fighting, Anatolia reported.

Two Turkish soldiers and a policeman were killed in new attacks blamed on PKK militants in the country's restive southeast, officials and the army said Monday.

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