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ANKARA: PM Tries To Win Over Nationalist Voters As Expat Turnout Rem

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  • ANKARA: PM Tries To Win Over Nationalist Voters As Expat Turnout Rem

    PM TRIES TO WIN OVER NATIONALIST VOTERS AS EXPAT TURNOUT REMAINS LOW

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    Aug 8 2014

    The lower-than-expected voter turnout for the presidential election on
    Aug. 10 among Turkish citizens living abroad has driven Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan to try to obtain greater support from voters
    who embrace a nationalist ideology, the Taraf daily reported on Friday.

    Claims of a low turnout among Turkish expatriates has suggested
    that Erdogan has little chance of being elected in the first round
    of Sunday's presidential election, causing him to begin using harsh,
    insulting rhetoric against racial and ethnic minorities in an effort to
    gain more support from voters highly sensitive to nationalist ideals,
    according to the news report.

    However, the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), which is well-known
    for the highly nationalist orientation of its policies and for
    criticizing Erdogan due to the settlement process being conducted
    between government officials and the imprisoned leader of the outlawed
    terrorist Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) in an effort to find a
    solution to the country's decades-old Kurdish problem, lashed out at
    Erdogan's attempt to lure nationalist voters ahead of the election.

    In an address to the public on a TV channel on Tuesday, Erdogan, the
    presidential candidate of the Justice and Development Party (AK Party),
    emphasized the religious and ethnic backgrounds of his political
    rivals -- Ekmeleddin Ä°hsanoglu and Selahattin DemirtaÅ~_ -- and made
    offensive remarks concerning people of Georgian and Armenian descent.

    During his speech, Erdogan repeated previous statements he had made
    about the backgrounds of Republican People's Party (CHP) leader
    Kemal Kılıcdaroglu and Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) leader and
    presidential candidate Selahattin DemirtaÅ~_. Erdogan had earlier said:
    "Kılıcdaroglu, you are an Alevi and I am Sunni. You should state this
    openly. DemirtaÅ~_, you are Zaza. Don't be worried about speaking
    out about this." In response to a question posed during a joint
    broadcast of Star TV and NTV regarding the negative reaction these
    words have drawn, Erdogan said: "Let all Turks in Turkey say they are
    Turks and all Kurds say they are Kurds. What is wrong with that? You
    wouldn't believe the things they have said about me. They have said
    I am Georgian...they have said even uglier things -- they have called
    me Armenian, but I am Turkish." Erdogan's statement describing being
    Armenian as "uglier" than being Georgian has resulted in a rapid,
    angry backlash among broad segments of society.

    As to the reasons for the low turnout among Turkish citizens living
    abroad, the online appointment requirement set by the Supreme
    Election Board (YSK) and the inadequate numbers of voting locations
    are reportedly the greatest reasons for the reluctance of expats to
    cast votes, affecting elderly voters who are not computer-literate and
    those who live far from the cities where Turkish diplomatic missions
    are located.

    According to YSK data, there are 2.7 million eligible voters who were
    allowed to vote between July 31 and August 3 at the polling centers in
    the Turkish missions; however, the turnout fell short of expectations.

    Media outlets reported that just eight percent of those eligible
    voters took part in the election, which Erdogan apparently believes
    he will win.

    Taraf argued that Erdogan had been hoping to draw strong support from
    expatriates, corresponding to two percent of the total amount of the
    vote and seen a very important margin for Erdogan to be elected in
    the first round of the election. However, the low turnout has changed
    the course of Erdogan's election campaign, driving the prime minister
    to pursue the nationalist voters, the daily reported.

    If none of the candidates garners more than 50 percent of the vote
    in the first round, the second round of voting for Turkish citizens
    abroad will take place between Aug. 17 and 20, while it will be held
    on Aug. 24 at home.

    The low turnout abroad seems to indicate that the victor will emerge
    after a second round of voting, urging Erdogan to target those who
    have favored the nationalist parties in previous elections.

    MHP reacts harshly to Erdogan's new tactic to lure nationalist votes

    On Friday, Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) Parliamentary Group
    Deputy Chairman Oktay Vural slammed Erdogan saying, "How can you say
    'my brother' to the supporters of the MHP? How can a person [Erdogan]
    who earlier defined nationalists as 'animals, divisive and racist
    people appeal for their support today?"

    Vural strongly reacted to what he described as the prime minister's
    "political tactic" at rallies during the presidential election campaign
    to lure nationalist voters, adding, "It is obvious that while Erdogan
    previously trampled on all nationalist values and ideals, today he
    thinks otherwise. But everyone knows his words praising nationalist
    ideals are a fake sympathy designed to lure our brothers' support in
    the upcoming presidential election."

    Continuing his criticism, Vural went on to say, "As it suits his
    purposes, Erdogan announces being an Armenian, a person who embraces
    Kemalist ideology [shaped around Mustafa Kemal Ataturk's ideals,
    founder of the modern Turkish Republic in 1923] and sometimes a
    Georgian. Such a crooked man cannot be the brother of the nationalist
    people."

    http://www.todayszaman.com/anasayfa_pm-tries-to-win-over-nationalist-voters-as-expat-turnout-remains-low_355040.html

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