On 14 May, Turkey will elect its president and members of the parliament for the next five years. Unless one of the four presidential candidates gets the required 50 percent plus one vote, the second round of voting will take place 14 days later on May 28, between the two candidates receiving most votes.
The two leading competitors, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and his People’s Alliance and Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and his Nation Alliance, both claim to have enough votes to win the presidential race in the first round and win most of the seats in the parliament.
The last surveys are a few days old now, as the election law does not allow surveys during the last 10 days into the election.
Erdoğan and his Justice and Development Party (AKP) have governed Turkey for the last 22 years. Even though the last 6-7 years have been very tough, and popularity has been partly lost, Erdoğan has continued to rule with full authority.
The presidential candidate of the opposition, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, has been leading the centre-left Republican People's Party (CHP) since 2010. Despite multiple election losses and various other setbacks, he has managed to consolidate CHP.
His party has scored major points in March 2019 municipal elections where it took from AKP the municipalities of major cities of Istanbul, Ankara, Bolu and Antalya, among others.
In 2018, Kılıçdaroğlu gave a supporting hand to the Good Party (İYİP), which was founded by breakaways from Nationalist Action Party. He made it possible for them to enter parliament and form their own party group.
Later on, Kılıçdaroğlu was able to put together the Nation Alliance also known as “Table of 6”, which comprises of Republican People's Party (CHP), Democrat Party (DP), Democracy and Progress Party (DEVA), Future Party (GP), Good Party (İYİP) and Felicity Party (SP).
These six political parties have their differences and are competitors. They are centre left, nationalist, liberal and conservative.
Despite that, they have been able to put their differences aside and unite for a common cause, which is mainly to end Erdoğan’s rule, return back to a parliamentary system, restore the economy and revitalise and reform state institutions.