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Felicity Party

The Felicity Party (Turkish: Saadet Partisi, SP) is an Islamist Turkish political party. It was founded in 2001, and mainly supported by conservative Muslims in Turkey.

Felicity Party
Saadet Partisi
AbbreviationSAADET (official)
SP (unofficial)
LeaderTemel Karamollaoğlu
Founded20 July 2001 (2001-07-20)
Preceded byVirtue Party
HeadquartersZiyabey Cad. 2. Sk. No: 15, Ankara, Turkey
NewspaperMillî Gazete
Youth wingGenç Saadet
Membership (2022) 265,738[1]
IdeologyMillî Görüş
Islamism[2]
Religious nationalism[3]
National affiliationNation Alliance (2018)
ColoursRed, white
Grand National Assembly
1 / 600
Metropolitan municipalities
0 / 30
District municipalities
21 / 1,351
Provincial councillors
3 / 1,251
Municipal Assemblies
295 / 20,498
Website
saadet.org.tr

It was founded on 20 July 2001 after the Virtue Party (FP) was banned by the Constitutional Court. While the party's reformist wing formed the Justice and Development Party (AKP), the hardliners founded the Felicity Party. Although an Islamist party, its policy platform covers the whole span of political issues in Turkey.

The Felicity Party's vote has been weakened by the success of the moderately Islamic Justice and Development Party government, although it has repeatedly condemned the Turkish government's desire to join the European Union, military ties with Israel and the United States. It has argued that Turkey must adapt its military and foreign policy stance to meet what it argues are increasing threats coming from the West to all Muslim countries.

The Felicity Party's policy platform is based strongly around Necmettin Erbakan's ideas and philosophy.

The Felicity Party works both as a political party and an enormous social organization. It has party branches in nearly every district, small town and city in the country. In the past it has organized demonstrations on a wide range of issues, often involving tens of thousands of participants. Thousands of protesters joined SP organized demonstrations against the 2004 attack on Fallujah, against the cartoons of Muhammad in newspapers around the world, and most recently against Israel's invasion of Gaza during the 2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict.

The party participated in the Nation Alliance in the 2018 general elections with the Republican People's Party (CHP), Good Party (İYİ), and Democrat Party (DP).

Electoral results

The Felicity Party has not been particularly successful electorally, polling just 2.5% of the vote in the 2002 general elections, thereby failing to pass the 10% threshold necessary to gain representation in the Turkish Grand National Assembly. It was slightly more successful in the local elections of 29 March 2004, winning 4.1% of the vote and a number of mayoralties, although none of any particular significance. In the 2011 election they were reduced to 1.24% on the vote. During the period, Recai Kutan (20 July 2001 – 11 May 2003 and again 30 January 2004 – 29 March 2008), Necmettin Erbakan (11 May 2003 – 30 January 2004 and again from 17 October 2010[4] till his death on 27 February 2011) and Numan Kurtulmuş (26 October 2008 – 1 October 2010) were leaders. In June 2015 elections it won 2.06% of the votes.

National Alliance (2015)

In preparation for the June 2015 general election, the Felicity Party stated that it was open to negotiate an electoral alliance with other parties such as the Great Union Party (BBP) and the larger Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). Although the MHP later announced that it was not willing to form an electoral alliance, the SP and BBP agreed upon a new alliance in order to increase their chances of surpassing the election threshold of 10% to gain representation in Parliament. The new alliance was named the National Alliance (Millî İttifak).

The Nation and Justice Party (MİLAD) also expressed their intention to join the alliance, but when they were only given top spots on the candidate lists in only 4 electoral districts, MİLAD withdrew and was unable to contest the election for not sending their own party lists to the Supreme Electoral Council on time.

The candidate lists were drawn up such that BBP candidates were placed top in electoral districts in which they won more votes than the SP in 2011, while SP candidates were placed top in provinces in which the SP had beaten the BBP in 2011. This meant that an SP candidate was placed first in 55 provinces, while a BBP candidate was placed first in 30. The remaining positions subsequently alternated between SP and BBP candidates.[5] SP leader Mustafa Kamalak was selected as the first candidate for İstanbul's 1st electoral district while BBP leader Mustafa Destici was selected as the first candidate for Ankara's 2nd electoral district.[6]

Party leaders

# Leader
(Birth–Death)
Portrait Took Office Left Office
1 Recai Kutan
(1930–)
  20 July 2001 11 May 2003
2 Necmettin Erbakan
(1926–2011)
  11 May 2003 30 January 2004
(1) Recai Kutan
(1930–)
  8 April 2006
(acting from 30 January 2004)
26 October 2008
3 Numan Kurtulmuş
(1959–)
  26 October 2008 17 October 2010
(2) Necmettin Erbakan
(1926–2011)
  17 October 2010 27 February 2011
4 Mustafa Kamalak
(1948–)
  5 March 2011 30 October 2016
5 Temel Karamollaoğlu
(1941–)
  30 October 2016

See also

References

  1. ^ "Saadet Partisi" (in Turkish). Court of Cassation. Retrieved January 10, 2022.
  2. ^ Benjamin Bruce, ed. (2018). Governing Islam Abroad: Turkish and Moroccan Muslims in Western Europe. Springer. p. 25. ISBN 9781317755098. Over the last years, it seems that Süleymancılar vote has increasingly become split between the far-right nationalist Nationalist Movement Party (Milliyetçi Hareket Partisi, MHP), the Islamist Felicity Party, and the AKP.
  3. ^ Necati Polat, ed. (2016). Regime Change in Contemporary Turkey: Politics, Rights, Mimesis. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 9781474416993. In the nationwide local elections in March 2004, the Islamonationalist Party of Bliss (or Felicity Party, Saadet Partisi, SP) representing the settled Islamist outlook in politics for some time, from which the AKP had departed abandoning its identity discourse for a wider slant, would sink to 4 per cent.
  4. ^ "84-year-old Erbakan elected Felicity Party leader". Today's Zaman. October 18, 2010. Retrieved October 18, 2010.
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-04-12. Retrieved 2015-05-19.
  6. ^ Şafak, Yeni (April 12, 2015). "İşte SP-BBP ittifakının aday listesi". Yeni Şafak.

External links

felicity, party, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Felicity Party news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message The Felicity Party Turkish Saadet Partisi SP is an Islamist Turkish political party It was founded in 2001 and mainly supported by conservative Muslims in Turkey Felicity Party Saadet PartisiAbbreviationSAADET official SP unofficial LeaderTemel KaramollaogluFounded20 July 2001 2001 07 20 Preceded byVirtue PartyHeadquartersZiyabey Cad 2 Sk No 15 Ankara TurkeyNewspaperMilli GazeteYouth wingGenc SaadetMembership 2022 265 738 1 IdeologyMilli GorusIslamism 2 Religious nationalism 3 National affiliationNation Alliance 2018 ColoursRed whiteGrand National Assembly1 600Metropolitan municipalities0 30District municipalities21 1 351Provincial councillors3 1 251Municipal Assemblies295 20 498Websitesaadet org trPolitics of TurkeyPolitical partiesElectionsIt was founded on 20 July 2001 after the Virtue Party FP was banned by the Constitutional Court While the party s reformist wing formed the Justice and Development Party AKP the hardliners founded the Felicity Party Although an Islamist party its policy platform covers the whole span of political issues in Turkey The Felicity Party s vote has been weakened by the success of the moderately Islamic Justice and Development Party government although it has repeatedly condemned the Turkish government s desire to join the European Union military ties with Israel and the United States It has argued that Turkey must adapt its military and foreign policy stance to meet what it argues are increasing threats coming from the West to all Muslim countries The Felicity Party s policy platform is based strongly around Necmettin Erbakan s ideas and philosophy The Felicity Party works both as a political party and an enormous social organization It has party branches in nearly every district small town and city in the country In the past it has organized demonstrations on a wide range of issues often involving tens of thousands of participants Thousands of protesters joined SP organized demonstrations against the 2004 attack on Fallujah against the cartoons of Muhammad in newspapers around the world and most recently against Israel s invasion of Gaza during the 2008 2009 Israel Gaza conflict The party participated in the Nation Alliance in the 2018 general elections with the Republican People s Party CHP Good Party IYI and Democrat Party DP Contents 1 Electoral results 2 National Alliance 2015 3 Party leaders 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksElectoral results EditThe Felicity Party has not been particularly successful electorally polling just 2 5 of the vote in the 2002 general elections thereby failing to pass the 10 threshold necessary to gain representation in the Turkish Grand National Assembly It was slightly more successful in the local elections of 29 March 2004 winning 4 1 of the vote and a number of mayoralties although none of any particular significance In the 2011 election they were reduced to 1 24 on the vote During the period Recai Kutan 20 July 2001 11 May 2003 and again 30 January 2004 29 March 2008 Necmettin Erbakan 11 May 2003 30 January 2004 and again from 17 October 2010 4 till his death on 27 February 2011 and Numan Kurtulmus 26 October 2008 1 October 2010 were leaders In June 2015 elections it won 2 06 of the votes National Alliance 2015 EditIn preparation for the June 2015 general election the Felicity Party stated that it was open to negotiate an electoral alliance with other parties such as the Great Union Party BBP and the larger Nationalist Movement Party MHP Although the MHP later announced that it was not willing to form an electoral alliance the SP and BBP agreed upon a new alliance in order to increase their chances of surpassing the election threshold of 10 to gain representation in Parliament The new alliance was named the National Alliance Milli Ittifak The Nation and Justice Party MILAD also expressed their intention to join the alliance but when they were only given top spots on the candidate lists in only 4 electoral districts MILAD withdrew and was unable to contest the election for not sending their own party lists to the Supreme Electoral Council on time The candidate lists were drawn up such that BBP candidates were placed top in electoral districts in which they won more votes than the SP in 2011 while SP candidates were placed top in provinces in which the SP had beaten the BBP in 2011 This meant that an SP candidate was placed first in 55 provinces while a BBP candidate was placed first in 30 The remaining positions subsequently alternated between SP and BBP candidates 5 SP leader Mustafa Kamalak was selected as the first candidate for Istanbul s 1st electoral district while BBP leader Mustafa Destici was selected as the first candidate for Ankara s 2nd electoral district 6 Party leaders Edit Leader Birth Death Portrait Took Office Left Office1 Recai Kutan 1930 20 July 2001 11 May 20032 Necmettin Erbakan 1926 2011 11 May 2003 30 January 2004 1 Recai Kutan 1930 8 April 2006 acting from 30 January 2004 26 October 20083 Numan Kurtulmus 1959 26 October 2008 17 October 2010 2 Necmettin Erbakan 1926 2011 17 October 2010 27 February 20114 Mustafa Kamalak 1948 5 March 2011 30 October 20165 Temel Karamollaoglu 1941 30 October 2016See also EditJustice and Development Party Turkey List of political parties in TurkeyReferences Edit Saadet Partisi in Turkish Court of Cassation Retrieved January 10 2022 Benjamin Bruce ed 2018 Governing Islam Abroad Turkish and Moroccan Muslims in Western Europe Springer p 25 ISBN 9781317755098 Over the last years it seems that Suleymancilar vote has increasingly become split between the far right nationalist Nationalist Movement Party Milliyetci Hareket Partisi MHP the Islamist Felicity Party and the AKP Necati Polat ed 2016 Regime Change in Contemporary Turkey Politics Rights Mimesis Edinburgh University Press ISBN 9781474416993 In the nationwide local elections in March 2004 the Islamonationalist Party of Bliss or Felicity Party Saadet Partisi SP representing the settled Islamist outlook in politics for some time from which the AKP had departed abandoning its identity discourse for a wider slant would sink to 4 per cent 84 year old Erbakan elected Felicity Party leader Today s Zaman October 18 2010 Retrieved October 18 2010 SP BBP isbirliginin ismi belli oldu Milli Ittifak Izmir Haberleri Archived from the original on 2015 04 12 Retrieved 2015 05 19 Safak Yeni April 12 2015 Iste SP BBP ittifakinin aday listesi Yeni Safak External links EditOfficial home page in Turkish English pages permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Felicity Party amp oldid 1132043394, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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