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Erdogan says Turkish elections to be held on 14 May, a month earlier than scheduled

Opinion polls show the parliamentary and presidential elections will be tight, and will mark Erdogan's biggest test in his two decades in power
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks during a group meeting at the Turkish Grand National Assembly in Ankara on 18 January 2023 (AFP)
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaks during a group meeting at the Turkish Grand National Assembly in Ankara on 18 January 2023 (AFP)

President Tayyip Erdogan has announced that Turkey will hold elections on 14 May, a month earlier than scheduled, setting up a tight test of his leadership after two decades in power.

The president's office released video footage on Sunday of Erdogan announcing the date during a meeting with young voters in the northwestern province of Bursa late on Saturday, according to Reuters.

"I am grateful to God that we will be walking side by side with you, our first-time voting youth, in the elections that will be held on 14 May," Erdogan told the group.

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The 68-year-old leader has been in power for 20 years and faces his toughest electoral test in years amid record inflation.

Erdogan has overseen years of economic growth in the country that saw Turkey join the ranks of middle-income countries.

Recent years of unorthodox economic policies, however, have seen the government battling inflation that has depleted people's savings and seen real wages go down.

Opinion polls show the parliamentary and presidential elections will be tight, and will mark Erdogan's biggest test in his two decades at the reins of the regional military power and Nato member.

Turkey's presidential and parliamentary elections were scheduled to be held on 18 June, but Erdogan previously signalled that the vote could be brought forward.

An official of his AK Party had previously said that an election in June would coincide with the summer holiday season when people would be travelling.

Symbolic date

But the date announced on Sunday is also very symbolic.

On 14 May 1950, Turkey held its first democratic elections resulting in the Democrat Party (DP) winning a landslide victory over the Republican People's Party (CHP).

The victory of the DP marked the end of the single-party rule that had dominated the country since its founding in 1923 when Mustafa Kemal Ataturk founded it.

The AK Party has its roots loosely in the DP, and Erdogan is looking to pitch the historic defeat of the CHP party in 1950 as one that his party looks set to repeat.

It is widely believed that CHP leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu will be Erdogan's main opponent in the forthcoming elections as a unity candidate for the opposition parties.

Erdogan's supporters praise him for giving a voice to the marginalised and creating a thriving new middle class in the nation of 85 million people.

But his opponents highlight a more illiberal, anti-democratic streak that emerged in the second decade of Erdogan's rule.

Gearing up for the elections 

Erdogan eliminated a retirement age requirement last month, clearing the way for more than two million workers to retire immediately as he gears up for a heated election.

The move allows about 2.3 million employees to claim early retirement - regardless of age - as long as they meet set requirements.

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The measure, which has been advocated by Turkey's big labour unions, applies to people who started working before September 1999 and who have completed 20-25 years of social security-registered working life.

Erdogan's key base of working-class support has been hit particularly hard by Turkey's economic crisis, which has seen savings erode as inflation shot to 85 percent.

Last month, Erdogan also announced a 55 percent increase in the country's minimum wage, though the plunge in the lira's value means that actual wages have increased only fractionally in dollar terms.

Many emerging market economies have been battered by a rising US dollar and global inflation exacerbated by the war in Ukraine, however, economists say that Turkey's woes have been largely self-inflicted.

Erdogan subscribes to an unorthodox economic theory that high-interest rates cause inflation. He has pressured the central bank to cut borrowing costs and increase credit access, despite conventional wisdom saying otherwise.

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