Erdogan's party wants rerun of Istanbul election

Dunya News

The AKP won most votes nationwide in the March 31 vote

(AFP) – Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan s party on Tuesday urged the Istanbul mayor s election be re-run after electoral authorities rejected a demand for a recount of all ballots cast in the city.

The Justice and Development Party (AKP) had appealed after its Istanbul candidate narrowly lost in last week s local election in what would be a major setback after a decade and a half in power.

Erdogan s party also lost the capital Ankara but the president on Monday questioned the Istanbul results and hinted at a rerun because he said the vote was marred by ballot box theft.

"We will take the path of extraordinary appeal... We will say that we want the election in Istanbul to be repeated," AKP s deputy chairman Ali Ihsan Yavuz told reporters in Ankara.

Officials at the Supreme Electoral Council, known by its Turkish initials YSK, would have to decide whether the ruling party has a case for a rerun of the very tight Istanbul election.

After Turkish media reported that the AKP had made the application to the YSK, Yavuz denied the reports as "untrue" on Twitter. "We are considering using the extraordinary appeal method in the days ahead."

The AKP won most votes nationwide in the March 31 vote, but voters appeared to punish the party in the two mayor cities partly because of an economic slowdown that followed Turkey s currency crisis last year.

A defeat in Istanbul would be especially sensitive for Erdogan, who grew up in one of its working-class neighbourhoods and built his political career after being Istanbul mayor himself in the 1990s.

Both opposition Republican People s Party (CHP) candidate Ekrem Imamoglu and the AKP s Binali Yildirim claimed victory soon after preliminary tallies showed them in a dead heat.

Election officials later said Imamoglu was ahead but the gap has narrowed to around 15,000 votes after recounting of void ballots this week.

Both won around four million votes in the election for Istanbul, the country s biggest city and economic hub.

AKP representative Recep Ozel said the difference between Imamoglu and Yildirim was now just 14,604 ballots, while the latest figures from the CHP suggested the difference was 14,463.

Imamoglu, a little-known mayor of one of Istanbul s districts who ran a low-key campaign, has already declared himself Istanbul mayor. He urged electoral authorities to make the "right decision" and asked the AKP to accept the result.

"Istanbul urgently needs a new leadership," he told a press conference. "You lost, I understand those who made mistakes, who are worried about their seats. But that s enough, don t damage this country and this city ... don t play with Istanbul s destiny."


Organised crimes


Devlet Bahceli, leader of the right-wing MHP, the AKP partner, told reporters in Ankara there could be "consideration" of another election in Istanbul. He said the process would take 60 days. "After 60 days, there could be an election on the first Sunday," he said.

Erdogan had personally campaigned hard in the city though he was not running in the election, and presented the vote as a matter of national survival. He put forward Yildirim, a former premier and AKP heavyweight, as the party candidate.

Soon after the election, AKP officials did manage to appeal for a recount of void ballots after saying they had discovered massive irregularities in voting in Istanbul and Ankara. But Yavuz said election council had rejected its call for all votes to be recounted in the Istanbul mayor s race. "It is incomprehensible for a decision like this to be made when the irregularities are clear to see," he said.

Erdogan on Monday questioned the results, claiming there had been "theft" at the ballot box and "organised crimes" were carried out in Istanbul. He said appeals and even re-runs were not unusual in other countries when there was doubt over votes.

Recep Ozel, the AKP s representative on the YSK board, said earlier that the electoral council had accepted the party s challenge of "irregularities" in ballot boxes. But there would only be a partial recount of 51 ballot boxes in 21 Istanbul districts.

A decision for one Istanbul district, Buyukcekmece, had been delayed because of an investigation into fraud claims. Istanbul police were investigating claims 11,186 people changed their addresses to Buyukcekmece before the local elections, DHA news agency reported.