Recep Tayyip Erdogan's grip on Turkey is loosening.
Voters in Istanbul delivered a stinging rebuke to Erdogan's policies that pushed the economy into distress and his chipping away at democracy in the Middle East nation, with his candidate losing the race for mayor in a landslide.
The new mayor, Ekrem Imamoglu, a 49-year-old municipal politician who campaigned on a promise to stop wasting public resources, is set to become the most credible challenger to Erdogan's rule in the years ahead. He may also have shown there's a way to defeat populists at the ballot box by rejecting partisanship and reaching out to their followers.
Investors will be glad, at least briefly, to see a major source of uncertainty removed with the vote. But Turkish assets aren't out of the woods yet, and Erdogan isn't the type to quietly accept defeat.
At the same time, Erdogan's growing regional ambitions – from backing rebels in Syria to purchasing Russian missiles to gaining air supremacy in the eastern Mediterranean – are taking a toll on the economy.
All this comes as Erdogan tries to fend off painful U.S. sanctions over the Russian missile purchase – something he'll try to sort out at a meeting with Donald Trump at the Group of 20 summit later this week.
And that may increase the odds of a major challenge to one of the region's preeminent strongmen at the next presidential election, scheduled for 2023.
– Onur Ant
Post a Comment