Recep Tayyip Erdogan re elected as Turkish president

Recep Tayyip Erdoğan re elected as Turkish president

The challenger Kılıçdaroğlu cannot end the head of state’s 20-year rule. Erdoğan is facing another
five years in office – and the next electoral campaign is already starting.

Nothing loves Recep Tayyip Erdoğan more than election campaigns. His runoff victory for the Turkish presidency had barely been confirmed late on Sunday, when the 69-year-old began campaigning for next year’s local elections, in which he wants to win back the metropolis of Istanbul for his AKP party. “With you we go to new victories,” Erdoğan said in a speech to fans in Istanbul. He then flew to Ankara, where he intended to deliver another victory speech later that night.

“We opened the door to Türkiye’s century,” Erdoğan said. The president has been in power for 20 years and has shaped the republic founded 100 years ago longer than any Turkish politician before him. After Sunday’s victory, he could reign until 2028; he has already discussed a constitutional amendment that would allow him to serve another term thereafter.

In the second round, the incumbent received about 52.1% of the votes. His opponent Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu accounted for 47.9 percent. Erdogan has been elected Turkey’s 13th president, election authority head Ahmet Yener confirmed in Ankara on Sunday. In the first presidential runoff in Turkish history, Erdoğan fell short of the result of the last election in 2018, when he won 52.6%. Voter turnout was 85.6%, down from 88.8% on May 14.

Republic of Erdogan

For more than two decades, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has determined Turkey’s fortunes. He is loved and hated, the country has fundamentally changed under his aegis. And his base does not depart from him. A dossier by Duygu Özkan

Most Turks Abroad to Erdogan