Is the March 30 referendum in danger?

İhsan Yılmaz
İhsan Yılmaz


Date posted: February 5, 2014

İHSAN YILMAZ

Yes, I know that Turkey will have local elections on March 30, 2014, but Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has already turned it into a referendum in which the public will make a decision about the corruption allegations against him and his friends.

Duriing a TV debate program on Samanyolu Haber TV in which I took part last week, my last sentence was that the forthcoming elections would be a kind of referendum and if Mr. Erdoğan’s party receives more than 40 percent of the vote, we must brace ourselves for an autocracy. Unsurprisingly, my analysis of his behavior was confirmed by him on Tuesday. When in Germany, during a press conference together with Angela Merkel, he openly declared that if his party becomes the top party in the elections, this will mean that the people have decided that his party is clean.

First and foremost, we must note that he longer believes that he can get 50 percent of the vote. This was their claim up until a few months ago yet the corruption evidence is so strong that he had to sacrifice four of his ministers and had to remove 200 prosecutors and 7,000 police officers from their posts. Obviously, people are aware of what is going on and some polls suggest that his party’s votes have already shrunk to 36 percent. Thus, instead of boasting that he will receive 50 percent, he very humbly talks only about being the top party. This means that he may be talking about a mere 30 percent since the Republican People’s Party (CHP) and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) will have difficulty receiving more that 30 percent of the vote. Yet, he is ready to abuse this 30 percent to explain away the corruption allegations and whitewash them without any serious or credible judicial processes.

In the past, he complained about the independent judiciary, implying that his party cannot do whatever it wants. Then, his party proposed to Parliament a constitutional referendum package on a presidential system without much checks and balances. According to this proposal, President Erdoğan together with his majority in Parliament would appoint two-thirds of all the judges in all the supreme courts, meaning that the executive would control the judiciary. This very proposal also included an item that gave him legislative powers as well. When Parliament is not in session, he could enact laws on issues if there weren’t clear and specific laws on these issues. This proposal is telling enough in that he wants to combine powers and has a distaste for the separation of powers. This distaste includes other major powers such the fourth estate, the media, and the most important one, civil society.

It has become very evident that some businessmen who benefitted illegally in major state tenders acquired independent media, a person very close to Erdoğan was appointed as the editor-in-chief and that this media organ became a mouthpiece of Erdoğan. Independent civil society groups such as the Turkish Industrialists and Businessmen’s Association (TÜSİAD) and the Hizmet movement are constantly depicted as traitors and the puppets of international dark forces by Erdoğan.

Academics are threatened as well. Last week, the Justice and Development Party (AKP)-controlled Higher Education Board (YÖK) passed a decree to silence the academia. From now on academic are only allowed to talk about their area of expertise. A columnist, Mr. Cem Küçük of the Yeni Şafak daily, who is a staunch advocate of Erdoğan, wrote that academics such as myself and Savaş Genç are part of a coup against the Erdoğan government and that these academics deserve the fate of a colonel, Talat Aydemir, who failed in a coup attempt in the early 1960s and was hanged. His only evidence is our defense of the Hizmet movements on TV programs on the basis of the supremacy of law, democracy and human rights. Even though we did not say anything against democracy or law, he fabricated a lie saying that we defended the alleged illegal activities of some bureaucrats. What we said was that there are crimes and instead of gossiping about these during election meetings, Erdoğan must present concrete evidence to the judiciary and to the media.

These are the people who lied about the Gezi protesters, alleging that there was CCTV footage of youths consuming alcohol and doing illicit things (i.e., having sex) in a mosque. I am afraid and very concerned that their ethical and moral standards will allow them to rig the local elections since this is an existential referendum for them. The opposition must consider all sorts of probabilities and take precautions.

Source: Todays Zaman , February 5, 2014


Related News

Shutting down prep schools against free enterprise, analysts say

“It’s not possible to make out of this behavior befitting a government that defends a market economy,” Seyfettin Gürsel, director of Bahçeşehir University’s Center for Economic and Social Research, told Today’s Zaman. Opponents of the government’s plan have also noted that the prep schools are a consequence of the many inadequacies of Turkey’s education system, and said that prep schools help low-income students enter university.

Turkey detainees tortured, raped after failed coup, rights group says

Jason Hanna and Tim Hume Captured military officers raped by police, hundreds of soldiers beaten, some detainees denied food and water and access to lawyers for days. These are the grim conditions that many of the thousands who were arrested in Turkey face in the aftermath of a recent failed coup, witnesses tell Amnesty International. […]

Lessons from Dec. 17: Who is parallel?

To prove whether the Gülen movement has a parallel structure , one has to establish that the investigations and wiretappings were not conducted within the scope of a legal investigation. If that is proven, one has to demonstrate that the police and prosecutors in charge of the investigations were receiving instructions not from the state but from sources within the movement. Both of these claims have to be proven with evidence.

Gülen’s lawyer: Systemic, illegal wiretaps taking place in Turkey over last six months

After “lies” and “defamatory statements” about Gülen surfaced in the media once new recordings were leaked on the Internet, lawyer Nurullah Albayrak said in a written statement that Gülen’s phone calls had been illegally wiretapped.

Gülen-linked journalist association warns that movement’s support for gov’t can end

Erdoğan and his supporters have cast the corruption probe as a smear campaign devised by Gülen, who exercises broad, if covert, influence in the media and judiciary through his followers. In response, the government has staged an unprecedented purge of the police forces and has moved to increase its control over the judiciary. Yeşil said that all these allegations were unfounded.

Kerry Tells Turkish Foreign Minister Coup Accusations Irresponsible

Secretary of State John Kerry said Sunday he told Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu that it was irresponsible for his country to accuse the U.S. of involvement in Friday’s coup attempt.

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

Erdoğan’s Civil Death Project’ : The ‘politicide’ spanning more than a decade

In Case You Missed It

AKP Twitter troll asks gov’t to kill all Gülen sympathizers in jail

Defamation campaign against Gülen draws heavy criticism

Pro-gov’t news portal proposes ways to execute Gülen followers

Torture appeared widespread after Turkey coup: UN expert

Erdogan pushes further to replace Gülen schools in Africa to spread his ideology

Gülen’s attorney: Media speculation about extradition not true

Abant Platform: perspectives on Turkey

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News