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1994 Turkish local elections

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FieldValue
election_name1994 Turkish local elections
countryTurkey
typelegislative
previous_election1989 Turkish local elections
previous_year1989
election_date
next_election1999 Turkish local elections
next_year1999
seats_for_electionAll 3,215 district municipalities and 16 metropolitan municipalities of Turkey
1blankMunicipalities
2blankMayor ±
3blankPopular vote^
4blankPercentage
5blankSwing
image_size130x130px
image1Turkish prime minister Tansu Çiller in Brussels.jpg
leader1Tansu Çiller
party1True Path Party
popular_vote1**6,027,095**
percentage1**21.40%**
swing13.73pp
last_election123.13%
image2Mesut Yilmaz as Turkish Prime Minister.jpg
leader2Mesut Yılmaz
party2Motherland Party (Turkey)
popular_vote25,937,031
percentage221.08%
swing20.72pp
last_election221.80%
image3Necmettin Erbakan.jpg
leader3Necmettin Erbakan
party3Welfare Party
last_election39.80%
popular_vote35,388,195
percentage319.13%
swing39.33pp
image4Murat Karayalçın (cropped).jpg
leader4Murat Karayalçın
party4Social Democratic Populist Party (Turkey)
last_election428,69%
popular_vote43,807,921
percentage413,52%
swing415.17pp
image5Bülent Ecevit-Davos 2000 cropped.jpg
leader5Bülent Ecevit
party5Democratic Left Party (Turkey)
popular_vote52,463,853
percentage58.75%
swing50.27pp
last_election59.03%
leader6Alparslan Türkeş
party6Nationalist Movement Party
popular_vote62,239,117
percentage67.95%
swing6*New*
last_election6
leader7Deniz Baykal
party7Republican People's Party
popular_vote71,297,371
percentage74,61%
swing7*New*
last_election7
map_image1994 Mahalli İdareler Seçimleri BB.png

Local elections were held in Turkey on 27 March 1994.

Background

1989 local elections

In the 1989 Turkish local elections, ANAP suffered a nationwide rout in what many saw as a referendum on the Turgut Özal administration. Nurettin Sözen, a doctor from the center-left Social Democratic People’s Party (SHP) became Istanbul's mayor, creating hopes for the left’s nationwide rise. The SHP promised a break from the past with its platform focused on clean government and anti-corruption. But under the new administration, things only appeared to get worse. For one thing, Istanbul's population nearly doubled in the 1990s, creating massive demand for public services.

Istanbul in the 1990s

Istanbul had a large garbage problem in the 1990s and it reached a new high with the Üsküdar garbage explosion when a trash heap in a slum neighborhood exploded. Methane gas had built up beneath the filth, finally igniting and causing an avalanche that killed 27 of the hapless poor. Also, that winter the air was filled with soot from the millions of coal-burning ovens that families were using to heat their homes. Many began wearing surgical masks before going outside.

The İSKİ Scandal

Three years into Sözen’s term, the İSKİ Scandal broke out. Ergün Göknel, a Sözen appointee who ran the Istanbul Water and Sewerage Administration (İSKİ) had divorced his wife in 1992 to marry an İSKİ employee three decades his junior, offering his wife a divorce settlement valued in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. But his former wife was not content to console herself quietly with her new fortune. She went to the press to declare the size of the settlement, which was far too large for a public servant to afford, and to voice her suspicions about her husband’s alleged illicit dealings. This triggered a flurry of speculation in the press about corruption in İSKİ and the SHP, and Turkey’s prosecutors sprang into action, preparing a handful of high-profile cases against leftist leaders. While İSKİ burned, Göknel married his new wife at the Istanbul Hilton, the city’s first American-built deluxe hotel. Mayor Sözen, infuriated, removed Göknel from his post and declared that he would support the harshest disciplinary action against any corrupt dealings uncovered in a criminal investigation. It was a buck too short, a day too late: the Turkish left, already weakened due to anti-leftist measures implemented in the aftermath of the 1980 coup, died in Istanbul in 1994.

Rise of Erdoğan

The İSKİ Scandal was unfolding during the peak of the local-elections season, and with every detail it seemed to prove what Necmettin Erbakan and his Welfare Party had been saying all along: that the people were suffering because they were governed by elites whose moral fiber had been rotted by Western ways. Turkey’s leaders were too busy fleecing the public and having affairs with each other to bother themselves with the problems of the suffering masses.

Erdogan’s 1994 campaign played upon these themes with tremendous virtuosity. He called the RP the “voice of the silent masses.” While other parties lacked the grassroots infrastructure to communicate directly with the residents of Istanbul’s shanty towns, the RP machine could interact with them at a highly granular level, thanks to its vast database. Populism, too, helped the RP’s cause. The party pledged to keep bread prices low through municipally subsidized bread factories, and RP representatives handed out coal and groceries in poor neighborhoods, once again taking advantage of their computerized database. It was said that one RP lieutenant even handed out gold coins to prospective voters.

Results

The 1994 nationwide local elections showed that the vast majority of the voting public was still not comfortable with the Islamist RP alternative, even when the establishment parties were at their worst.

Provincial assemblies

Metropolitan municipality mayors

Metropolitan
municipalityMayorParty
**Adana**Aytaç DurakMotherland Party (ANAP)
**Ankara**Melih GökçekWelfare Party (RP)
**Antalya**Hasan SubaşıTrue Path Party (DYP)
**Bursa**Erdem SakerMotherland Party (ANAP)
**Diyarbakır**Ahmet BilginWelfare Party (RP)
**Erzurum**Ersan GemalmazWelfare Party (RP)
**Eskişehir**Aydın AratTrue Path Party (DYP)
**Gaziantep**Celal DoğanSocial Democratic Populist Party (SHP)
**Istanbul**Recep Tayyip ErdoğanWelfare Party (RP)
**İzmir**Burhan ÖzfaturaTrue Path Party (DYP)
**Kayseri**Şükrü KaratepeWelfare Party (RP)
**Kocaeli**Sefa SirmenSocial Democratic Populist Party (SHP)
**Konya**Halil ÜrünWelfare Party (RP)
**Mersin**Okan MerzeciMotherland Party (ANAP)
**Samsun**Muzaffer ÖnderRepublican People's Party (CHP)

Mayor of other municipalities

ProvinceParty
AdıyamanRP
AfyonkarahisarANAP
AğrıRP
AksarayRP
Amasya
ArdahanDYP
ArtvinDYP
AydınANAP
BalıkesirDYP
BartınANAP
BatmanRP
BayburtRP
BilecikDYP
BingölRP
BitlisRP
BoluSHP
ProvinceParty
BurdurSHP
ÇanakkaleCHP
Çankırı
ÇorumRP
DenizliCHP
EdirneCHP
ElazığRP
Erzincan
GiresunANAP
GümüşhaneDYP
HakkâriSHP
HatayANAP
IğdırDYP
IspartaDYP
KaramanCHP
ProvinceParty
Kars
Kastamonu
KırıkkaleANAP
KırklareliSHP
Kırşehir
KütahyaRP
MalatyaRP
ManisaANAP
KahramanmaraşRP
MardinDYP
MuğlaSHP
MuşRP
NevşehirRP
NiğdeSHP
OrduANAP
ProvinceParty
RizeRP
SakaryaRP
SiirtRP
SinopSHP
ŞırnakANAP
SivasRP
TekirdağANAP
TokatRP
TrabzonRP
TunceliSHP
ŞanlıurfaRP
UşakDYP
VanRP
Yozgat
ZonguldakANAP

|}

References

References

  1. Çaǧaptay, Soner. (2017). "The new sultan : Erdogan and the crisis of modern Turkey".
  2. Newman, Barry. (12 September 1994). "Turning eastward: Islamic party's gains in Istanbul stir fears of a radical Turkey". [[The Wall Street Journal]].
  3. White, Jenny B.. (1995). "Islam and democracy: the Turkish experience". Current History.
  4. Öktener, Aslı. (8 February 2001). "Nurdan Erbuğ'un pişmanlığı!". [[Milliyet]].
  5. Montalbano, William. (4 November 1994). "The army's prestige is growing amid political scandal". The Guardian.
  6. (10 August 2014). "Kasımpaşa'dan Çankaya'ya, yoksulluktan yolsuzluk suçlamalarına Erdoğan'ın hayatı". T24.
  7. Eligür, Banu. (2010). "The Mobilization of Political Islam in Turkey". New York: Cambridge University Press.
  8. Akıncı, Uğur. (1999). "The Welfare Party's municipal track record: evaluating Islamist municipal activism in Turkey". Middle East Journal.
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