Although the Labour and Freedom alliance, representing the Kurdish national movement in the recent Turkish elections, maintained its lead in most Kurdish-majority provinces in the southeast, the overall election results were unfavourable to the Kurds, despite optimistic expectations.
The alliance received fewer votes compared to the 2018 parliamentary and presidential elections, failing to establish a balanced parliamentary bloc that could have led to a majority in alliance with Turkish opposition forces in the Nation Alliance.
According to the semi-final results, the alliance secured 66 parliamentary seats, with the Kurdish nationalist Green Left Party receiving 62 seats and the Labour Party, a left-wing nationalist party affiliated with the alliance, receiving 4 seats.
The alliance gained a majority in 13 south-eastern provinces, particularly in the significant population centres and symbolic strongholds of Van and Diyarbakir, which are home to the Kurds.
However, despite these achievements, the Kurdish alliance fell short of the previous parliamentary formation of the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), which held 67 seats. It also fell significantly below the alliance's own promises and expectations of securing around 100 seats and forming a parliamentary majority with the opposition.
The Kurdish alliance’s backing of Turkish opposition candidate Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu enabled him to win in 11 out of the 15 Kurdish-majority provinces, garnering nearly 5 million votes out of his total 24.5 million votes.
Their support prevented Erdogan — for the first time in his electoral history — from winning in the first round. However, this wasn’t enough for a decisive win, and now the two candidates are heading for run-off election.
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