Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, who was victorious in presidential and general elections just less than a year ago in May 2023, suffered a serious setback in local elections on 31 March.
Erdoğan had hoped for a sweeping victory, but the main opposition party CHP (Republican People's Party) turned out to be the winner.
Around 78% of Turkey’s 61.4 million eligible voters went to the polls to elect mayors in 81 provinces, 973 districts and 390 towns, plus thousands of local council members.
With almost all the ballots counted, Erdoğan’s ruling AKP (Justice and Development Party) had got 35.49% of the vote, whereas CHP scooped 37.74%.
Four other parties registered, these being YRP (New Welfare Party) with 6.19%, DEM (People's Democracy Party) with 5.68%, MHP (Nationalist Action Party) with 4.96%, and İYİP (Good Party) with 3.77%.
Analysing the results
Compared to the last local elections in 2019, AKP took around 4.2 million fewer votes, while CHP chalked up 3.3 million more, so it is certainly a swing.
In terms of percentages, AKP received 44% of the votes in 2019, meaning a relative drop of around 8.5%, whereas CHP only received 30.12% in 2019, meaning an upswing of around 7.5%.
Less than a year ago, in May 2023, AKP triumphed in the general and presidential elections, with around three million more votes (35.62%).
This week, CHP not only retained all three major cities—Ankara, İstanbul and İzmir—as well as other cities the party won in 2019, but it also added new ones.
The number of provinces CHP won in 2024 has almost doubled, gaining 35 this week, compared to 20 in the 2019. Likewise, AKP is down from 39 to 24.
Erdoğan had sought to recover his losses in the last local elections in 2019 and ran an active election campaign, with rallies and meetings every day across the country.
Senior cabinet members, including the interior minister, foreign minister, and justice minister, went door-to-door, visited guilds, and broke fast at iftars for Ramadan.
Erdoğan said towns and cities run by AKP mayors were best placed to get the most out of public and municipal services, but it seems the voters were not convinced.
The opposition had protested that state resources and bureaucracy was at the disposal of Erdoğan’s ruling AKP. Many used their vote to express their discontent.
Winning the cities
In Turkey’s local elections, Istanbul has long been the jewel in the crown. This year that was as true as ever.
The former environment minister Murat Kurum was AKP’s candidate in İstanbul. In reality, voters were choosing between President Erdoğan himself and Ekrem İmamoğlu, the current mayor of Istanbul.
Erdoğan, who suffered one of the heaviest blows in his political career when İmamoğlu was elected as mayor in the 2019 local elections, based his party’s campaign in Istanbul on “making up for the lost years” and promises of “urban transformation”.