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1999 Turkish general election

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FieldValue
countryTurkey
typeparliamentary
previous_election1995 Turkish general election
previous_year1995
next_election2002 Turkish general election
next_year2002
seats_for_electionAll 550 seats in the Grand National Assembly
majority_seats276
election_date18 April 1999
turnout87.09% (1.89pp)
image_size130x130px
image1Bülent Ecevit-Davos 2000 cropped.jpg
leader1Bülent Ecevit
party1Democratic Left Party (Turkey)
last_election114.64%, 76 seats
seats1136
seat_change160
popular_vote1**6,919,670**
percentage1**22.19%**
swing17.55pp
image2Devlet Bahçeli VOA 2015 (cropped).jpg
leader2Devlet Bahçeli
party2Nationalist Movement Party
last_election28.18%, 0 seats
seats2129
seat_change2129
popular_vote25,606,583
percentage217.98%
swing29.80pp
image3Recai Kutan 2009 crop.jpg
leader3Recai Kutan
party3Virtue Party
last_election3
seats3111
seat_change347
popular_vote34,805,381
percentage315.41%
swing35.97pp
image4Mesut Yilmaz as Turkish Prime Minister.jpg
leader4Mesut Yılmaz
party4Motherland Party (Turkey)
last_election419.65%, 132 seats
seats486
seat_change446
popular_vote44,122,929
percentage413.22%
swing46.43pp
image5Turkish prime minister Tansu Çiller in Brussels.jpg
leader5Tansu Çiller
party5True Path Party
last_election519.18%, 135 seats
seats585
seat_change550
popular_vote53,745,417
percentage512.01%
swing57.17pp
map_image1999 Turkish General Election by Province.svg
map_captionResults by province
titlePrime Minister
before_electionBülent Ecevit
before_partyDSP
after_electionBülent Ecevit
after_partyDSP

General elections were held in Turkey on Sunday, 18 April 1999. For the first time, local, council and parliamentary elections were held on the same day. Bülent Ecevit's Democratic Left Party (DSP) had been soaring in popularity after the capture of Kurdistan Worker's Party (PKK) leader Abdullah Öcalan, emerged as the biggest party and swept the board in most of Turkey's western provinces. It failed, however, to obtain an overall majority, and did not do nearly as well in the eastern provinces.

The second largest party (dubbed "the second winner" by the press the following day) became the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), which performed strongly nationwide, producing MPs from nearly all of the country's 81 provinces. The largest party of the last election, the Virtue Party (FP), returned to opposition after shedding forty-seven seats and a million votes. The decline of the Republican People's Party continued; this was the first and the only time in the history of the republic when the party failed to cross the 10 percent threshold for parliamentary representation. This was the last election which produced a hung parliament until the June 2015 general election.

Background

During the 1997 Turkish military memorandum, in case the Welfare Party were to be banned, the Virtue Party was founded in December 1997. The Welfare Party was subsequently banned in January 1998.

Results

Aftermath

Bülent Ecevit formed the country's latest coalition government, against the FP, with the second-placed MHP and the fourth-placed Motherland Party (ANAP) as a junior partner. The DYP was consulted during coalition negotiations, but ended up in opposition. The DSP–MHP–ANAP coalition turned out to be one of the most stable in many years, surviving without change until Ecevit's hospitalisation and subsequent refusal to resign in 2002 prompted a wave of resignations from the DSP and early general elections. Five parties in the parliament (DSP, MHP, FP, ANAP and DYP) all failed to gain seats in 2002 elections.

Notes

References

References

  1. Şafak, Yeni. (2023-07-03). "Türkiye uçurumda: 1999 genel seçimi".
  2. (2023-02-20). "Haritalarla Seçimler: 1999 Genel Seçimleri".
  3. "SEÇİM 2002". BBC News.
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