Sunday, March 29, 2009

Local elections in Turkey

It seems like the democratic arena gets better with this elections. AKP, the religious party in power had 541 municipalities (12 of them being metropolitan areas and 46 of them province capitals). Current situtation indicates that the number of AKP municipalities will drop to 495 (10 metropolitan and 36 capital). 

On the other hand, the main opposition party CHP will increase its presence from 138 municipalities (2 metropolitan, 6 capital) to 183 (3 merto area, 10 capital).

Also a third party will emerge during the local elections: MHP (nationalist party). They double their presence from 76 to 135 municipalities. One of them is a metropolitan area municipality in the south of Turkey. It is ironic that the only nationalist metropolitan city is the home of Incirlik Air Base, that is used by the USA.

Turkish election results 2009

I am quite shocked to see that many people are searching for "Turkish elections" (and Google indexes my blog so quickly.) I decided to update this post as results start to come in.

Now, voting is open for Turkish Local Elections 2009, which will elect mayors for all the municipalities in Turkey. Drinking and selling alcohol is prohibited today, to make sure that voters are sober :)

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Turkish elections 2009

Tomorrow there are local elections in Turkey. I would like to say that that something will change, but it isn't likely. All the big municipalities (Istanbul, Ankara, Izmir, Bursa) will remain in the same domains maybe with smaller margins this time.

There are mainly three parties in the arena: AKP (religious, populist) with more than 50% share, CHP (Ataturk's party with an unwanted, unsuccessful current leader) with 25% share, and MHP (nationalist party) with around 15% share. In such a democratic arena, AKP will win in almost every city because of the undemocratic, mass dominance.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Hello World!

I believe in local culture and local values. That's why I insist on writing and blogging in Turkish, my mother language. However, sometimes I feel the urge to write something in English so that a greater audience will hear my uber-important comments.

This blog will include my humble opinions about Turkey and Turkish online culture.