It seems that the AKP has found a way to divide the secular parties
regarding the presidential election.  It's also interesting that "The
bills that Mr. Erdogan's party submitted included lowering the minimum
age for candidates for Parliament to 25. This would be a boost for the
party, known by its Turkish initials, A.K., because its constituency
and supporters are overwhelmingly young." -- Yoshie

<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/03/world/europe/03turkey.html?>
May 3, 2007
In Political Row, Turkey Advances National Ballot
By SABRINA TAVERNISE

ISTANBUL, May 2 — Turkish lawmakers on Wednesday set national
elections for July 22, four months earlier than planned, and Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's party submitted a package of bills
that would bring it advantages in the coming political battle.

Elections had been scheduled for Nov. 4, but on Tuesday, Turkey's
highest court annulled Parliament's vote for president, effectively
blocking Mr. Erdogan's candidate, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, a
close ally with a background in Islamic politics. The ruling created a
standoff between Mr. Erdogan's Justice and Development Party and the
secular establishment.

Speaking with characteristic emotion, Mr. Erdogan delivered what
amounted to a counterattack against the secular establishment for
blocking Mr. Gul. The court ruling, he said, was "a bullet for
democracy," and the battle's real winner would emerge through national
elections.

Turkey's military, which sees itself as the protector of Turkish
secularism and has ousted four elected governments since 1960, is
unlikely to intervene as long as early elections are held as planned.

The bills that Mr. Erdogan's party submitted included lowering the
minimum age for candidates for Parliament to 25. This would be a boost
for the party, known by its Turkish initials, A.K., because its
constituency and supporters are overwhelmingly young.

Other proposals were to take the presidential election out of the
hands of Parliament and place it in a national vote, a step to prevent
the secular establishment from blocking a candidate again.

The bill calls for a national election in two rounds, and a president
who would serve for five years instead of the current seven.

The main secular opposition party is strongly against such a measure,
but some smaller ones are in favor, and Mr. Erdogan would need only a
handful of additional votes to get it passed.

In a largely procedural move, Parliament also set a schedule for a
continuation of the presidential vote. Mr. Erdogan's party knows there
is virtually no chance that Mr. Gul could be confirmed, but the law
requires that a constitutional process like the election of the
president continue once it starts.
--
Yoshie

Reply via email to