Politics

Turkey election: Live updates


10:08 a.m. ET, May 14, 2023

Voters concerned about the state of the economy, damage caused by the quake



Damaged buildings from the devastating earthquake in February are seen in the Armutlu neighborhood of Antakya, Turkey, on Saturday.

Tolga Sezgin/Getty Images

High in voters’ concerns is the state of the economy and the damage caused by the earthquake. Even before the February disaster, Turkey was struggling with rising prices and a currency crisis that in October saw inflation hit 85%.

That impacted the purchasing power of the public and is “fundamentally the reason why Erdogan’s popularity has been eroded,” said Sinan Ulgen, a former Turkish diplomat and chairman of Istanbul-based think-tank EDAM. “That is going to be the major handicap for Erdogan,” he added.

Voters also cast their ballots based on whom they see as more capable of managing the fallout from the earthquake, as well as shielding the country from future disasters, analysts say, adding that President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s popularity had not taken the expected political impact.

There is a debate about which electoral platform provides the right solution to address these vulnerabilities and enhance Turkey’s resilience to these national disasters,” Ulgen said.

Apart from the economy and the government’s management of Turkey’s frequent natural disasters, voters are likely concerned with Erdogan’s turn away from democracy – something the opposition has campaigned to reverse.





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