The long-awaited presidential and parliamentary elections of 14 May produced a second round for the presidential election as none of the candidates were able to exceed the 50% threshold and a new parliament with no clear majority for any of the parties or alliances.
This means that Turkey’s 64 million plus registered voters will mobilise once again for the second round which will be held on 28 May with the two candidates who received the most votes, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, facing off.
It is important to emphasise that this analysis is written on the basis of the situation as of Monday morning.
99% of ballot boxes in Türkiye and 84% of boxes abroad have been opened and counted. There are few remaining boxes and official results are expected to be announced tomorrow.
Results of the presidential election:
The candidates received the following percentages and number of votes:
- Recep Tayyib Erdoğan: 49.42% (26.859.313 votes)
- Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu: 44.95% (24.430.618 votes)
- Sinan Ogan: 5.20% (2.824.118 votes)
- Muharrem İnce: 0.43 (235.618 votes)
In the 2018 elections, there were six candidates and Erdoğan won in the first round with 52.59% of votes. His closest contender received 30.64% of votes.
The participation rate in the elections held yesterday was 87.6 % compared to 88.19% in 2018.
Comparing the results of 2023 to 2018, Erdoğan has received around 4% less votes and failed to secure a first-round victory. But overall, the result of the first round is a success for Erdoğan and a disappointment for Kılıçdaroğlu.
Results of the parliamentary election:
Nation Alliance led by Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and People’s Alliance led by Recep Tayyib Erdoğan competed for 600 seats in the parliament.
Nation Alliance comprises:
- Republican People's Party (CHP)
- Democrat Party (DP)
- Democracy and Progress Party (DEVA)
- Future Party (GP)
- Good Party (İYİP)
- Felicity Party (SP)
People’s Alliance comprises:
- Justice and Development Party (AKP)
- Grand Unity Party (BBP)
- Nationalist Action Party (MHP)
- New Welfare Party (RP)
- Free Cause Party (HüdaPar)
- Democratic Left bir Party (DSP)
AKP is once again the party with the most number of deputies in the parliament despite (compared to 2018) losing around 7% of its votes and 28 deputies to the opposition.