Turkish PM Erdogan declares election victory

Campaign dominated by struggle between Erdogan and moderate US-based cleric Gulen

Turkish prime minister Tayyip Erdogan, accompanied by his wife Emine, greets his supporters at the AK Party headquarters in Ankara last night. He declared victory in local polls that had become a referendum on his rule. Photograph: Reuters
Turkish prime minister Tayyip Erdogan, accompanied by his wife Emine, greets his supporters at the AK Party headquarters in Ankara last night. He declared victory in local polls that had become a referendum on his rule. Photograph: Reuters

Turkish prime minister Tayyip Erdogan has declared victory in local polls that had become a referendum on his rule and said he would "enter the lair" of enemies who have accused him of corruption and leaked state secrets. "They will pay for this," he said.

Mr Erdogan, fighting the biggest challenge of his 12-year rule, addressed supporters from a balcony at AKP headquarters at the end of a long and bitter election campaign in which he has labelled his opponents "terrorists" and an "alliance of evil".

The harsh tone of his balcony address suggested he felt he now had a mandate for strong action against his enemies. “From tomorrow, there may be some who flee,” he said.

The election campaign has been dominated by a power struggle between Mr Erdogan and a moderate US-based cleric, Fethullah Gulen, whom he accuses of using a network of followers in the police and judiciary to fabricate graft accusations in an effort to topple him.

READ MORE

Mr Erdogan has purged thousands of police and hundreds of judges and prosecutors since anti-graft raids in December targeting businessmen close to him and sons of ministers.

“We will enter their lair,” he said. “They will pay the price, they will be brought to account. How can you threaten national security?”

The turbulence has unnerved investors, driving the lira currency to a record low in January and prompting losses in stocks of some 8.6 per cent since late last year. The strong AKP showing, signalling political continuity, calmed nerves however today and the lira hit a two-month high.

"From a market perspective, the election result appears to be more or less what the doctor ordered: a solid win for the AKP which shores up the position of Turkey's ruling party," said Nicholas Spiro, head of Spiro Sovereign Strategy.

The crisis reached a new level when a recording of a top-secret meeting of security officials about possible intervention in Syria was posted anonymously on YouTube. The action, for which Mr Gulen denies any responsibility, raised serious concern about government control of its own security apparatus and fears of further damaging leaks.

Nato member Turkey, under Mr Erdogan, was long held up as a model for a Muslim democracy, and the prime minister carried out many reforms that eased human rights and drove the economy. But since a crackdown on anti-government protests last June he has been accused of intolerance.

With about 98 per cent of votes counted by early this morning, AKP, in power since 2002, had 45.6 per cent of the vote, the opposition CHP trailing with 28 per cent, according to Turkish television. If borne out, the result would be at the upper end of what Mr Erdogan might have expected, although the race for Ankara was going down to the line.

The CHP, Mr Erdogan said, must look at itself in the mirror.

“The old Turkey is no longer. The new Turkey is here,” he said, to cheers from supporters who shouted Allahu Akbar (God is greatest) and “Turkey is proud of you”. “Today is the victory day of the new Turkey, 77 million united ... as brothers.”

Mr Erdogan, lacking his own trained personnel, filled government departments with supporters of Mr Gulen when he first was elected in 2002. Mr Gulen, who runs a huge network of schools and businesses, is widely credited with having helped him break the army’s political power using his network in the police and judiciary.

But in recent years friction has grown between the two men and came to a head when Mr Erdogan moved to curb his influence and close the schools that are a key sort of income and influence.

Mr Erdogan seems likely now to step up his drive against the followers of Mr Gulen, who denies any wrongdoing. Criminal investigations and arrests could follow, especially after last Thursday's leak of the meeting between spymaster Hakan Fidan, a close Erdogan confidante, and military and civilian chiefs.

"Let me tell you, Erdogan's response is coming," said Tesev think-tank chairman Can Paker, seen as close to Mr Erdogan.

“He will harshly and fully clean up the police and judiciary. And he will purge the press that supported the leaks. He will most certainly do that. He will say ‘I was elected to eliminate them’ - he is not going to soften.”

Strong showing

The strong showing could embolden Erdogan to run in what will be the first popular election for the presidency in August. In doing so, he would take over a role that has been largely ceremonial, but with the aim of extending its powers.

There would be some risks involved. Mr Erdogan has described audio recordings anonymously posted on the internet implicating him in corruption as “montage”, a manipulation. But he must reckon with further such postings in the run-up to the presidential race.

His government has blocked access to both the social networking site Twitter and YouTube in moves condemned by western governments and rights groups.

He could also choose to run for a fourth term as prime minister in parliamentary elections next year.

Yesterday’s results will come as a bitter blow to the CHP.

"It's already clear from his speech this evening that he's basically threatening society," said CHP vice-president Gursel Tekin. "This shows his state of mind isn't to be trusted, and these obvious threats are not something that we can accept."

Mr Erdogan formed AK in 2001, drawing nationalists and centre-right economic reformers as well as religious conservatives who form his base. Since his 2011 poll victory he has moved more towards these core religious supporters he sees as having been “looked down upon” over generations by an urban secular elite.

Whatever the scale of Mr Erdogan’s victory, he faces a huge task in restoring control over the security apparatus of the country. Even in purging members of the police force he considers unreliable, he cannot be sure that the replacements he brings in will be loyal.

Reuters