Mahir Zeynalov
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ruling Justice and  Development Party (AKP) won a landslide victory in municipal elections  on Sunday, giving a major boost to this bellicose leader to crack down  on his opposition and curb freedoms.
Erdogan deserves victory as  he had campaigned day and night since the summer protests last year. He  could successfully exploit polarization in the country and constructed a  political atmosphere in which he played the role of a victim. In short,  he fooled the people into believing he is under fire by “foreign powers  and their pawns at home.”
For political Islamists like Erdogan, who consider many anti-Islamic  practices “halal” if they serve to embolden the power of the Islamists,  democracy and free elections are nothing but a tool of seizing  authority. Once Islamists hold power, they sideline the opposition and  crush critics. This was the major reason why the Islamist government of  late Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan, who was unfairly ousted by the  military, and other Islamist rulers in the region could not effectively  run the country for too long.
Erdogan’s strength lay in his  political taqiyya (an Islamic legal dispensation whereby a believing  individual can deny his faith or commit otherwise illegal or blasphemous  acts while they are at risk of significant persecution) for more than a  decade, when he quite successfully pretended to be a democratic leader.  He is an excellent orator and is skilled in convincing people that he  is the right leader by basically making false and completely opposite  statements. There is no free media to point out Erdogan’s ailing  policies to his largely rural supporters.
Unfair competing ground
The  electoral campaign was held on completely unfair grounds. Most  newspapers and TV networks had turned into the mouthpiece of Erdogan  while the government has endorsed a series of laws that curbed freedoms.  Even somehow independent media had to avoid broadcasting critical views  due to government presssure, the latest leaked voice recordings showed.  From banning access to Twitter and YouTube to purging the judiciary and  police, Erdogan created an atmosphere of fear that cast a shadow on  legitimacy of the elections.
Despite being described as a “thief-in-chief” and “murderer” by his critics, Erdogan’s government has suspended the rule of law and shut down the independent media
Mahir Zeynalov
The election is not the only voting day. Pre-election campaigning  largely benefitted Erdogan’s ruling party. Despite being described as a  “thief-in-chief” and “murderer” by his critics, Erdogan’s government has  suspended the rule of law and shut down the independent media to  survive the biggest corruption scandal to hit the Turkish republic.
Erdogan  told his supporters to consider the elections as a referendum and an  approval of the government. Those who would not vote for the ruling  party in local elections but in general elections (around ten percent)  voted for the AKP, increasing its votes to 46 percent. The ruling party  also rigged elections in many polling stations. Nearly 2,000 complaints  were filed against voting irregularities and the authorities switched  off lights in dozens of provinces during the counting process.
More power, more corruption
Erdogan  has won three general and three local elections since 2002 and in each  of these polls, his party could increase its votes. The increase in  votes also made Erdogan more authoritarian, making it clear that the  consolidated democracy he promised will no longer function in Turkey.
He  showed his authoritarian face over the past few years and Sunday’s  elections were a test to see if his electorate is discontent with the  way he is ruling. Good at politics and deception, Erdogan successfully  described this election as an “Independence War” and convinced people  that burying democracy is necessary to save the nation (remember  Hitler’s halting of freedoms after the fire in Parliament). In contrast,  the language he used for the opposition is very similar to Hitler’s  hate speech (“we will root you out, bloodsucking vampires, assassins,  traitors, agents, pawns of foreign powers, leeches, terrorists”). The  economy is in tatters and foreign investors are fleeing the country.  People voted for the ruling party because Erdogan convinced them that it  is a fight between Muslims and “infidels,” not because he is a  democratic leader. He called protesters atheists and said he doubts the  Islamic faith of his critics.
Absolute power corrupts absolutely
A  sense of deep disappointment prevailed among critics of Erdogan in  Turkey as the results of the polls were announced on Sunday night. But  those who want Erdogan out should be happier that Erdogan is feeling  stronger. The more powerful he feels, the more mistakes he will make to  prepare his own end. Revolutionary leaders, from Napoleon to Hitler,  were their own worst enemy and failed as a result of their tremendous  power.
On Sunday night, Erdogan greeted his supporters from the  balcony of his party’s headquarters after the stunning electoral  victory. Instead of delivering a conciliatory speech, he vowed to crush  the opposition. As he is bracing to introduce harsher policies to jail  critics, curb freedoms and end Turkey’s democracy, his supporters will  realize that they voted for a deeply anti-democratic leader, whose  actions can not be reconciled with Islamic principles.
I’m happy  that Erdogan received a high number of votes. Otherwise his exit from  politics would take some more years. With the landslide victory, Erdogan  has sealed his own fate.
 
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