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  • ANKARA: Public Support Shrinks For Opposition

    PUBLIC SUPPORT SHRINKS FOR OPPOSITION

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Sept 4 2008

    Public support for opposition parties in Turkey has considerably
    decreased, in contrast to a sharp increase in support for the ruling
    Justice and Development Party (AK Party), a new opinion poll has found.

    The Social and Political Situation in Turkey survey, conducted by
    the Ankara-based MetroPOLL Strategic & Social Research Center from
    Aug. 29-31, polled 1,251 people in several Turkish cities to find
    their views on the current political situation in the country -- which
    recently heaved a sigh of relief following the rejection of a closure
    case against the governing AK Party -- and the popularity of President
    Abdullah Gul, who recently completed his first year in office.

    According to the survey, a clear majority of Turkish society supports
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's AK Party, while the opposition
    parties, namely the Republican People's Party (CHP) and the Nationalist
    Movement Party (MHP), continue to suffer from declining popularity
    with the public.

    Asked who they would vote for if there was an election today, 50.9
    percent of respondents said they would vote for the AK Party. The
    figure demonstrated the ruling party's considerable increase in
    popularity in less than a month, as around 42 percent of those
    polled had said in early August they would vote for the AK Party
    if parliamentary elections were to be held the day of the poll. The
    survey revealed the CHP and the MHP would remain below the election
    threshold should general elections be held on the poll date. Only 9.5
    percent of respondents said they would vote for the CHP; 6.6 percent
    said they would favor the MHP (6.6) and 2.6 percent said they would
    vote for the Democratic Society Party (DTP). However 13.9 percent of
    those polled had said in the previous survey that they would vote for
    the CHP and 8.4 percent for the MHP. Of the remaining respondents,
    11.3 percent said they were undecided, while 7.0 percent said they
    would simply vote a blank ballot; 2.0 said they would not go to the
    ballot box at all, while 5.3 percent said they had no opinion.

    Another major topic of the survey was the president's popularity among
    the people. In response to a question on whether Gul had succeeded
    in being everyone's president during his first year in office, 55.7
    percent of those polled said yes, whereas 19.7 percent said no.

    The remaining either said they had no idea or that Gul reached his
    goal partially. Asked which president -- Gul, or former President
    Ahmet Necdet Sezer -- they trusted, 56.4 percent of the respondents
    said they trusted Gul and 21.7 percent said they trusted Sezer.

    Participants were also surveyed about concerns over secularism and the
    regime in Turkey. In response to a question over whether they shared
    the concerns for secularism and the regime raised during the process of
    Gul's election as president, 52 percent responded negatively and 26.6
    percent positively. When asked whether Gul's behavior and decisions
    during his first year in office endangered secularism in Turkey,
    78.4 percent said no and 17.7 percent said yes.

    Respondents were also asked about their view regarding the fact that
    Gul's wife, Hayrunnisa, wears the Islamic headscarf. In response
    to a question on whether they perceived her headscarf as a problem,
    an overwhelming majority of those polled -- 85.8 percent -- said no,
    with 13.7 percent responding positively.

    When asked whether Gul had acted with impartiality during his first
    year in office, 60.4 percent responded that he was completely impartial
    while 34.4 said he had displayed partisanship. Over 76 percent of
    respondents said Gul was sensitive toward society's social problems,
    while around 20 percent said he was insensitive. In response to a
    question over whether they were satisfied with Gul's performance in
    the presidency so far, 77.9 percent of those surveyed said yes and
    20.8 percent said no.

    Those polled were also asked for theirs opinion regarding Gul's recent
    appointments of university rectors. Asked whether they were satisfied
    with Gul's choices, 62.5 percent of respondents said they found them
    to be positive, and 25.5 percent said they found them negative.

    Gul appointed new rectors for 21 Turkish universities on Aug. 5. The
    appointments drew the ire of some circles, who leveled harsh criticism
    at Gul, claiming he nominated rectors with no experience in the field
    but who were known for their closeness to the AK Party. A number of
    professors from various universities even resigned from their posts
    in protest, saying they were dissatisfied with the rector appointments
    at their respective universities.

    When asked if they approved of CHP officials' refusal to attend any
    official or private meetings with Gul held at the Cankaya presidential
    palace, an overwhelming majority of respondents said they believed
    the CHP officials were pursuing a wrong strategy, and only 12.7 said
    they supported the CHP's stance in that regard.

    Another question directed at respondents was about Gul's pardoning of
    former Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan. In response to a question
    over whether Gul was right to use his presidential pardon to lift
    Erbakan's sentence, 54.6 percent said he was right in doing so;
    33.7 percent said he was wrong, and 11.8 percent said they had no idea.

    To justify his pardon, Gul cited a report prepared by the
    forensic medicine administration showing that Erbakan's health was
    deteriorating. Erbakan, the former leader of the now-defunct Welfare
    Party (RP), was sentenced to two years and four months behind bars in
    a lawsuit known as the "lost trillion" case, but was able to postpone
    serving his sentence by submitting medical reports to the court. The
    lost trillion case concerns the disappearance of more than 1 trillion
    Turkish lira in Treasury grants to the RP.

    Asked whether Gul should go to Yerevan to attend a soccer match between
    the Turkish and Armenian national teams upon an invitation from his
    Armenian counterpart, Serzh Sarksyan, 67.4 percent of those polled said
    he should go and 22.9 percent said he should not accept the invitation.

    Sarksyan had previously invited Gul to watch the Sept. 6 World Cup
    qualifying match between the Turkish and Armenian national teams in
    Yerevan, with which Ankara does not have any official relations.

    Officials from the CHP and the MHP have been extremely critical
    of the prospect of a possible visit to Armenia by Gul. They say
    a visit to Yerevan would mean alienating Azerbaijan, which is of
    vital importance to Turkey on many fronts. Turkey was among the first
    countries to recognize Armenia's independence, but closed its border
    with the latter and severed formal ties with Yerevan after Armenia
    occupied Nagorno-Karabakh.

    A considerable majority of poll respondents also said Gul was honest
    and trustworthy, a strong and decisive leader, a good statesman,
    attached importance to the country's problems and expectations of
    the people, represented Turkey with success, was democratic and
    pro-freedom and had the characteristics of a leader.

    Support for EU membership on the rise

    The survey also has found a clear majority of Turkish society supports
    Turkey's bid to join the European Union. Public support for Turkish
    EU membership has shown a considerable increase since the survey
    conducted in August.

    In response to a question on whether they would vote for or against
    Turkey's EU membership if there were a referendum today, 69.1 percent
    said they would vote "yes," while 23.7 percent said they would vote
    against it. In the previous survey, 28 percent of those polled were
    against EU membership while 66.2 percent supported it.

    When asked what they thought about political party closures in Turkey,
    40.9 percent of those polled said political parties should only be shut
    down if they resort to violence or call for violence in the country;
    37.4 percent said parties should not be disbanded under any condition,
    and 16.9 percent said existing legal provisions about political party
    closures in Turkey should remain untouched.

    In response to a question over whether the pro-Kurdish Democratic
    Society Party (DTP) should be shut down, 57.6 percent said it should
    remain open; 31.2 percent said it should be closed, and 11.3 percent
    said they had no idea.

    A closure case was filed against the DTP last year by a state
    prosecutor on the grounds that it had become a focal point for
    separatist activities.

    Another question directed at respondents was about the government's
    plan to launch Kurdish broadcasts through the state-owned Turkish Radio
    and Television Corporation (TRT). Asked what they thought of the plan,
    43.7 percent said: "I see the plan positively. Having a Kurdish TV
    station will improve Turkish democracy." But 51.8 percent said:
    "I see it negatively. Having a Kurdish TV station will increase
    separatist activities."

    In response to a question over whom the respondents admired most
    among living statesmen and politicians, 33.3 percent said they admire
    Prime Minister Erdogan, followed by President Gul (14.7) and former
    President Sezer (5.1).

    Asked which of the existing political party leaders they trusted most,
    51.9 percent of the respondents said they trusted Erdogan the most,
    followed by CHP leader Deniz Baykal (4.2) and MHP leader Devlet Bahceli
    (4.2).

    The telephone poll was conducted Aug. 29-31 among a random national
    sampling of 1,251 adults residing in cities, towns and villages. The
    margin of error for the full poll is 2.8 percentage points, at a 95
    percent confidence level.
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