A Most Memorable Hockey Tribute Happened in Columbus Last Night
That Nate Silver Trendline Is Not Good News for Kamala
How Pelosi Responds When Asked If She Thought Biden Has Forgiven Her
Kamala Offers Black Men Bribe to Get Their Votes
Harris' Town Hall Event With Charlamagne Got Roasted in the Comments
DeSantis Announces Update to Viral Video of Highway Patrol Rescuing Dog Abandoned as...
Georgia Judge Blocks Ballot Hand Counting Rule
Why This Average American Is Voting for Donald Trump…Again
A Reality TV Star Admitted That He Pretended to Be Transgender. Here's Why.
FBI 'Quietly Revises' Violent Crime Stats
Dems in Disarray: AOC and Fetterman Fighting Online Over Israel
Did You Notice Anything Odd at the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show?
Reality Again Debunks the Left's Ugly Lies and Misinformation About Georgia's Election Law
U.S. Army Training Materials Labeled Pro-Life Groups As Terrorists, Lawsuit Says
Catholic Group Doesn’t Buy Whitmer’s Apology for Stunt Mocking Catholics
Tipsheet

Turkey's Secularists Defeat Erdogan-Backed Islamist Candidate in Istanbul Mayoral Election

AP Photo/Burhan Ozbilici

Turkish voters elected by a wide margin an opposition candidate as mayor of Istanbul in a rerun election, delivering a forceful rebuke of the Islamist-aligned President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), which controlled the city’s highest office since 2004.

Advertisement

The newly elected mayor, Ekrem Imamoglu, a secularist candidate representing the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), secured 54 percent of the votes, while the defeated AKP candidate Binali Yildirim received 45 percent of votes cast, according to CNBC.

"You have protected our tradition of democracy, dating back a hundred years. Thank you, fellow Istanbul residents,” Imamoglu said at a press conference, adding further that he is “ready to work in harmony” with Erdogan, local news outlet Hurriet Daily News reported.

Imamoglu, the mayoral candidate for the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), was previously elected to the same office in March by a razor-thin margin, but the AKP pressured the country’s electoral authorities to toss out the results, triggering the rerun election on Sunday. 

This time, the ruling party did not contest the election results. Erdogan, who was previously mayor of Istanbul between 1994 and 1998, congratulated the victorious Imamoglu in a tweet, according to Politico.

In power first as prime minister and then as president since 2004, Erdogan has gradually shifted Turkey away from its secularist roots toward authoritarian and Islamist politics. The secular opposition’s victory in the cultural and economic capital of Turkey indicates there could be growing opposition to Turkey’s new politics, according to Reuters:

Advertisement

Erdogan has ruled Turkey since 2003, first as prime minister and then as president, becoming the country’s most dominant politician since its founder, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, nearly a century ago.

His AKP has strong support among pious and conservative Turks and its stewardship of Turkey’s economy through a decade and a half of construction-fuelled growth helped Erdogan win more than a dozen national and local elections.

But economic recession and a financial crisis have eroded that support and Erdogan’s ever-tighter control over government has alarmed some voters.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement