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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia |
Turkey's ruling party trailing in poll ahead of next year's vote |
2010-07-29 |
![]() The Sonar Arastirma survey, which has a margin of error of plus-or-minus 2 percentage points, shows Mr. Erdogan's Justice and Development Party (AKP) at 31.1 percent and the Republican People's Party (CHP) at 33.5 percent. The numbers are virtually unchanged since Sonar Arastirma's last poll, taken in May, before nine Turkish nationals were killed in a melee with Israeli commandos aboard a flotilla trying to break the Gaza blockade. Mr. Erdogan, whose government already had seen cooling relations with Israel, stoked popular wrath and threatened to sever ties with his country's longtime ally unless it apologized for the incident. But any "flotilla bump" appears to have vanished. "There is a sense among some elements of the population that AKP has overreached on foreign policy," said Turkey expert Steven Cook, a senior fellow for Middle Eastern studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. "I am not talking about the kind of die-hard nationalist secularists, but that important 'middle' or 'center' who aren't Islamists or militant nationalist secularists," Mr. Cook said. "These people voted for AKP in 2002 because of Turkey's economic free fall and again in 2007 because of Turkey's economic progress. They liked the EU reforms of 2003 and 2004. "They aren't all that unhappy with the general thrust of Turkish foreign policy, but they are starting to ask questions about AKP's foreign policy activism." Last month, Turkey was one of only two U.N. Security Council members to vote against a new round of sanctions on Iran for its illicit nuclear activities. In April, it held a military drill with Syria. Relations with Israel, meanwhile, remain at a breaking point. The Turkish economy grew at an average of 6 percent over the AKP's first five years in power and is expected to grow at 3.5 percent this year, despite the global economic slowdown. However, it is still wrestling with an unemployment rate around 13 percent. |
Posted by:tipper |
#3 Current Standings (MPs): Justice and Development Party (AKP) (Erdogan) Liberal Conservatism, Political Centrism, Islamist -- 341 (Won last election with 46.6% of vote. Has observer status in the European People's Party, a peculiar entity in its own right, mostly Christian conservative.) Republican People's Party (CHP) Social Democracy , Kemalist Ideology -- 112 (Strongly defeated in last election, with 20.85% of vote. A social democrat member of the Socialist International.) Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) Nationalism, Euroscepticism -- 71 (Jumped from 8.3% to 14.3% in last vote.) Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) Kurdish nationalism , Social Democracy -- 20 (Replaced an outlawed party associated with the PKK.) Democratic Left Party (DSP) Democratic Left , Kemalist Ideology -- 12 (Very opposed to US invasion of Iraq in GW2, then smote in an early election. Formerly allied with CHP.) |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2010-07-29 16:08 |
#2 Do we expect this to be a free and fair election? |
Posted by: trailing wife 2010-07-29 14:26 |
#1 "There is a sense among some elements of the population that AKP has overreached on foreign policy," Not to worry. PM Cameron publicly assured all Turks that Erdogan has not done anything that would result in any sort of negative consequences for Turkey. Smart move, Mr Cameron! And in case Mr Cameron indeed should have acted at the behest of the US: Smart move, Mr Obama! Islamofascists ruling a NATO country... What could go wrong? /sarc |
Posted by: Joluns Borgia1159 2010-07-29 13:26 |