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Radio France Internationale
Radio France Internationale
World
Michael Fitzpatrick

Erdogan calls Turkish general election for 14 May, one month early

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. AP - Burhan Ozbilici

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has announced that Turkey's elections will be held on 14 May, month earlier than scheduled. The political opposition is still searching for an agreed candidate to stand against him.

"I will use my authority to bring the election date forward to 14 May," Erdogan said at a meeting with young people in the northwestern city of Bursa this weekend.

Turkey's next general election was officially due on 18 June.

The Turkish leader said that the adjustment to the timetable had been agreed with right-wing coalition partners to avoid disrupting the school exam schedules.

Who can give Erdogan a fight?

The election campaign is due to start on 10 March, which will give the Turkish opposition even less time to prepare.

Opposition groups have been trying for months to agree on a single candidate to challenge Erdogan at the polls.

While Turkey's high inflation and weakening currency could help their cause, internal disagreements play to Erdogan's advantage.

He has been using the government's dominance in the media to control the nation's political debate.

An opposition party source told the AFP news agency this week that their joint candidate would be announced in February.

Istanbul's popular opposition mayor Ekrem Imamoglu is a favourite in opinion polls, which suggest he could beat Erdogan in a head-to-head race.

It was he who put an end to the domination of Erdogan's ruling party in the 2019 local elections.

An Istanbul court last month banned the 52-year-old from politics, but he has appealed and can technically run for president.

Imamoglu's legal battle has turned the main opposition CHP party's leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu into the most likely candidate to stand against Erdogan.

Bookish and less charismatic than the mayor, Kilicdaroglu has struggled to secure the support of the other opposition leaders.

Two decades at the top

Critics accuse Erdogan, who is a pious Muslim, of undermining the secular pillars of the modern republic.

Since he came to power in 2003, first as prime minister and then president, he has supervised an ambitious infrastructure programme, building tunnels, bridges and the country's largest airport.

He has reined in Turkey's military, having survived an attempted coup in 2016.

His subsequent crackdown on opponents as well as uneasy relations with Nato allies have raised questions about Turkey's future under his rule.

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