As Tough Elections Loom in Turkey, Erdogan is Spending for Victory
President
Recep Tayyip Erdogan is trying to soften the blow of inflation on the population
and using legal threats to bolster his position ahead of a vote that could reshape
his country.
Just
months before pivotal elections
that could reshape Turkey’s domestic and foreign policy, the government is spending
billions of dollars in state funds to bolster President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and
his governing party at the ballot box while unleashing an array of legal threats
to weaken those who seek to unseat him.
Some
economists call the spending spree unsustainable, and potentially harmful, as Mr.
Erdogan tries to soften the blow of inflation
on Turkish families in the run-up to the vote.
Additionally,
recent polls suggest that at least two potential opposition candidates could roundly
beat Mr. Erdogan and one of them faces four legal challenges that could knock him
out of the running and give Mr. Erdogan’s party control of Istanbul, Turkey’s largest
city and home to one in five of the country’s eligible voters.
Mr. Erdogan
and his aides insist that they are setting policy purely to serve the country of
84 million, whose citizens have rewarded him and his party with multiple electoral
victories over the past two decades. His critics counter that he has used his many
years as Turkey’s top politician to concentrate power in
his own hands and is now using it to shape
the outcome of the election before voters even go to the polls.
“Erdogan
is trying to fight this battle on ground he chooses, under the framework that he
determines, with the weapons that he picks, and preferably with the opponent that
he prefers,” said Ahmet Kasim Han, a professor of international relations at Beykoz University in Istanbul.
Both
Mr. Erdogan’s government and the political opposition view the simultaneous presidential
and parliamentary elections as a momentous opportunity to set the future course
for a NATO member
with one of the world’s 20 largest economies and strong diplomatic and business
ties across Africa, Asia and Europe.
Adding
symbolism to the vote is timing. Mr. Erdogan has said it would be held on May 14,
months before the 100th anniversary of the foundation of modern Turkey after the
collapse of the Ottoman Empire.
In the
meantime, he and his government have introduced vast spending for initiatives to
insulate voters from the economy’s troubles, at least until the election.
Since
late December, Mr. Erdogan has increased the national minimum wage by 55 percent;
bolstered the salaries of civil servants by 30 percent; expanded a program to give
subsidized loans to tradesmen and small businesses; and moved to abolish a minimum
retirement age requirement, allowing more than 1.5 million Turks to immediately
stop working and to collect their pensions.
Mr. Erdogan
has said that if he wins, it would vindicate his efforts to build Turkey’s economy,
increase its influence abroad and protect the country from domestic and international
threats. Speaking to members of his Justice and Development Party, or A.K.P., in
Parliament last week, he dismissed the political opposition as incompetent and billed
himself as the best person to lead the country into its second 100 years, which
he has called “Turkey’s century.”
“Look,
here I am as a politician who solves problems in his region and the world, who takes
responsibilities, who sets directions,” he said.
Mr. Erdogan
has been Turkey’s paramount politician for two decades, as prime minister from 2003
to 2014 and as president since then. His first decade in power saw a drastic expansion
of the economy that lifted millions of Turks out of poverty and expanded Turkish
industry.
But in
recent years, the economy has weakened and Turkish opponents and Western officials
have accused Mr. Erdogan of pushing the country toward autocracy, largely because
of sweeping powers he has
granted himself since a narrow majority of voters
passed a referendum in 2017 that expanded the president’s
role.
Mr. Erdogan’s
detractors say he has cowed the news media, limiting critical reporting, and extended
his influence over the courts, leading to politically motivated
trials. He has also taken charge of foreign and
fiscal policy, sidelining the Foreign Ministry and the central bank.
“The
election is not only about changing the government,” Canan
Kaftancioglu, the Istanbul chairwoman of the largest opposition
party, the Republican People’s Party, said in an recent
interview. “It is between those who are in favor of democracy
and those who are against democracy.”
Improving
the opposition’s chances are the country’s economic troubles, which have caused
some voters to question Mr. Erdogan’s stewardship. Largely because of his unorthodox
financial policies, the national currency lost nearly two-thirds of its value against
the dollar in the last two years and year-on-year inflation reached about
85 percent in November before dropping to 64 percent
in December.
Turkey’s
peak inflation rate in 2022 was nearly 10 times that of the United States and was
the second-highest among the Group of 20 largest economies, after Argentina. Soaring
prices have eaten into the budgets of Turkish families and eroded the middle class,
damaging Mr. Erdogan’s popularity.
But the
opposition faces major challenges, too.
Mr. Erdogan
is a deft political operative and orator who can rely on a vast party apparatus
that is enmeshed with the state and its resources. The opposition has yet to name
its candidate, leaving Mr. Erdogan to campaign unopposed and fueling speculation that the opposition is plagued by internal
divisions that could render it ineffective or tear it apart.
The recent
government spending spree adds to other initiatives introduced last year: a cash
support program for low-income families; government forgiveness of some debt; and
state-funded accounts to protect local currency deposits from devaluation.
“The
plan is, up until the election, they can spend lots of money,” said Ugur Gurses, a former central bank
official and finance expert. “I think they think it is worth it if they are going
to win. But if they lose, it will fall into the hands of the newcomers.”
The opposition’s
position has been further complicated by new legal threats to Ekrem Imamoglu, the mayor of Istanbul
and one of the potential rivals who recent polls suggest could beat Mr. Erdogan.
Last
month, a court barred Mr. Imamoglu from politics for two years and seven months
on charges that he insulted state officials. He had called electoral officials who
overturned his initial victory in the 2019 Istanbul mayor’s race “fools.”
The race
was rerun a few months later, and Mr. Imamoglu beat Mr.
Erdogan’s candidate again, this time by a much larger margin.
Mr. Imamoglu remains in office while appealing the conviction. But
in the weeks since last month’s court ruling, he has faced three new legal threats
that could temporarily knock him out of politics and remove him from office, passing
control of Turkey’s largest city to Mr. Erdogan.
The Interior
Ministry has sued Mr. Imamoglu for alleged corruption
during his previous job as an Istanbul district mayor in 2015; the interior minister
has accused the mayor’s administration of employing more than 1,600 people with
links to terrorism; and Mr. Imamoglu is being separately
investigated for allegedly insulting another district mayor, who is a member of
Mr. Erdogan’s party.
Hasan
Sinar, an assistant professor of criminal law at Altinbas University in Istanbul, dismissed the legal threats
as “purely political.”
“It’s
all about Imamoglu because he’s the rising star of the
opposition and they want to stop him,” said Mr. Sinar,
who filed a legal brief in support of Mr. Imamoglu with
the court in the first insult case.
While
it was unclear whether Mr. Erdogan had personally intervened in the case, Mr. Sinar said he doubted that a judge would rule against such a
high-profile figure without knowing that Mr. Erdogan would approve.
“This
is a political act that looks like a legal one,” he said, “and no one can do this
if it is against the will of the president.”