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Republican People's Party

The Republican People's Party (Turkish: Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, pronounced [dʒumhuːɾiˈjet haɫk 'paɾtisi] (listen), acronymized as CHP [dʒeːheːpeˑ]) is a Kemalist and social-democratic political party in Turkey which currently stands as the main opposition party.[11][7] It is also the oldest political party in Turkey, founded by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the first president and founder of the modern Turkish Republic. The party is also cited as the founding party of modern Turkey.[12] The CHP describes itself as a ''modern social-democratic party, which is faithful to the founding principles and values of the Republic of Turkey".[13][14] Its logo consists of the Six Arrows, which represent the foundational principles of Kemalism: republicanism, reformism, laicism (Laïcité/Secularism), populism, nationalism, and statism. It is the main opposition party to the ruling conservative Justice and Development Party (AKP) in the Grand National Assembly with 135 MPs.

Republican People's Party
Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi
AbbreviationCHP
LeaderKemal Kılıçdaroğlu
Secretary-GeneralSelin Sayek Böke
SpokespersonFaik Öztrak
FounderMustafa Kemal Atatürk
Founded
  • 7 September 1919 (1919-09-07) (as a resistance organisation)
  • 9 September 1923 (1923-09-09) (as a political party)
  • 9 September 1992 (1992-09-09) (re-establishment)
Preceded byCommittee of Union and Progress[1][2][3]
Association for the Defence of the Rights of Anatolia and Rumelia
HeadquartersAnadolu Bulvarı No: 12,
Çankaya, Ankara
Student wingHalk-Lis (Halkçı Liseliler)
Youth wingCHP Youth
Women's wingCHP Kadın Kolları
NGOAtatürkist Thought Association (unofficial)
SODEV (unofficial)
Membership (2022) 1,369,430[4]
Ideology
Political positionCentre-left[9]
National affiliationNation Alliance
European affiliationParty of European Socialists (associate)
International affiliationProgressive Alliance[10]
Socialist International
Colours  Red
Slogan"People First, Unity First, Turkey First!"
Grand National Assembly
134 / 600
Metropolitan municipalities
11 / 30
District municipalities
241 / 1,351
Provincial councilors
184 / 1,251
Municipal Assemblies
4,638 / 20,498
Election symbol

The Six Arrows
Party flag
Website
www.chp.org.tr

The political party has its origins in the various resistance groups founded during the Turkish War of Independence. Under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk they united in the 1919 Sivas Congress. On 9 September 1923, the "People's Party" declared itself to be a political organisation and on 29 October 1923, announced the establishment of the Turkish Republic, with Atatürk as its first president. In 1924, the People's Party renamed itself the "Republican People's Party". As Turkey moved into its one-party period, the CHP was the apparatus of implementing far reaching political, cultural, social, and economic reforms in the country.

After World War II, Atatürk's successor, İsmet İnönü, allowed for multi-party elections, and the party initiated a peaceful transition of power after losing the 1950 election, ending the one-party period and starting Turkey's multi-party period. The years following the 1960 military coup saw the party gradually trend towards the center-left, which was cemented once Bülent Ecevit became chairman in 1972. The CHP, along with all other political parties of the time, was banned by the military junta of 1980. The CHP was re-established with its original name and a more centrist outlook by Deniz Baykal on 9 September 1992, with the participation of a majority of its members from the pre-1980 period. Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu has returned the party back to its traditional centre-left position when he took over in 2011.

It is a founding party of the Nation Alliance,[15] a coalition consisting of opposition parties like the Good Party, Felicity Party, and Democrat Party against the ruling AKP and their People’s Alliance.[16] In addition, CHP is an associate member of the Party of European Socialists (PES), a member of the Socialist International,[17] and the Progressive Alliance. Many politicians of CHP have declared their support for LGBT rights[18][19][20] and the feminist movement in Turkey. The party continues its Pro-European policies and commitment to NATO.

The party's base includes the middle and upper-middle classes such as white-collar workers, retired generals, government bureaucrats, academics, college students, left-leaning intellectuals, labour unions such as DİSK, and Alevis.[21] The party's strongholds include the Western Aegean region (İzmir, Aydın, Muğla), Thrace, the east of the Black Sea Region (Ardahan and Artvin), and the Anatolian college town of Eskişehir.[22]

History

The Republican People's Party has its origins in the resistance organizations, known as Defence of Rights Associations, created in the immediate aftermath of World War I in the Turkish War of Independence. In the Sivas Congress, Mustafa Kemal Pasha (Atatürk) and his colleagues united the Defence of Rights Associations into the Association for the Defence of National Rights of Anatolia and Rumelia (Anadolu ve Rumeli Müdâfaa-i Hukuk Cemiyeti) (ADNRAR), and called for elections in the Ottoman Empire to elect representatives associated with the organization to the Commmittee of Representation. The Committee of Representation soon moved to Ankara and formed the Grand National Assembly as a counter parliament from the Ottoman government in Istanbul. Grand National Assembly forces militarily defeated Greece, France, and Armenia, overthrew the Ottoman government, and abolished the monarchy. After the 1923 election, ADNRAR was transformed into a political party called the People's Party (Halk Fırkası). Because of the unanimity of the new parliament, the republic was proclaimed, the Treaty of Lausanne was ratified, and the Caliphate was abolished the next year.[23]

In 1924, opposition to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk resulted in the foundation of the Progressive Republican Party (TCF). Reacting to the foundation of the TCF, his People's Party changed its name to the Republican People's Party (Cumhuriyet Halk Fırkası, soon Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi) (CHP). The life of the TCF was short. The TCF faced allegations of involvement in the Sheikh Said rebellion and for conspiring with members of the Committee of Union and Progress to assassinate Atatürk in the İzmir Affair. Because of this, it was closed on 5 June by the government. From 1925 until 1946, Turkey was under one-party rule, with one interruption; another brief experiment of opposition politics through the formation of the Liberal Republican Party.

In the period of 1925–1930, the CHP introduced sweeping reforms transforming Turkey into a modern state. In the period of 1930–1939, Atatürk's CHP clarified its ideology by adopting the 'Six Arrows', as well as borrowing tenants from Communism and Fascism.[24] It was during the one-party period that Inspectorates-General, Independence Tribunals, and military force were employed by Atatürk to suppress opposition to his nationalist reforms, at the expense of religious conservatives and Kurds. In the parties third convention, the party clarified their approach towards the religious minorities of the Christians and the Jews, accepting them as real Turks as long as they adhere to the national ideal and use the Turkish language.[25] On 12 November 1938, the day after Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's death, his ally İsmet İnönü was elected the second president[26] and assumed leadership of the Republican People's Party. İnönü's presidency saw the annexation of the Hatay State and the establishment of Village Institutes. İnönü adopted a policy of neutrality despite attempts by the Allies and Axis powers to bring Turkey into World War II. The party was associated with anti-communism.[27][28][29]

In the aftermath of World War II, İnönü called for a multi-party general election in 1946 – the first multi-party election in the country's history. The Motion with Four Signatures resulted in the resignation of some CHP members who then founded the Democrat Party (DP), which challenged the party in the election. The result was a victory for the CHP, which won 395 of the 465 seats, amid criticism that the election did not live up to democratic standards. However, four years later, a more free and fair general election was held in 1950 that led to the CHP losing power to the DP. İnönü presided over a peaceful transition of power. The 1950 election marked the end of the CHP's last majority government. The party has not been able to regain a parliamentary majority in any subsequent election since.[30]

Due to the winner-take-all system in place during the 1950s, the DP achieved landslide victories in elections that were reasonably close, meaning the CHP was in opposition for 10 years. In its ninth congress in 1951, the youth branch and the women's branch were founded. In 1953, the establishment of trade unions and vocational chambers was proposed, and the right to strike for workers was added to the party program. The Democrat Party was abolished after the 1960 military coup, and Prime Minister Adnan Menderes, Foreign Minister Fatin Rüştü Zorlu, and Finance Minister Hasan Polatkan were hanged in the İmralı island prison. Right-wing parties have since continuously attacked the CHP for their perceived involvement in the hanging of Adnan Menderes.[31]

With electoral law reform implementing proportional representation, the CHP emerged as the first-placed party at the general election of 1961, and formed a grand coalition with the Justice Party, a successor-party to the Democrat Party. This was the first coalition government in Turkey, which endured for seven-months. İnönü was able to form two more governments with other parties until the 1965 election. Bülent Ecevit, leader of the Democratic Left movement in the CHP, contributed to the party adopting the Left of Centre (Ortanın solu) programme for that election.[32] İnönü remained as opposition leader and the leader of the CHP until 8 May 1972, when he was overthrown as party leader by Ecevit in a party congress. Ecevit adopted a distinct left wing role in politics and, although remaining staunchly nationalist, attempted to implement democratic socialism into the ideology of CHP. Support for the party increased when Ecevit became prime minister in 1974 and invaded Cyprus. The CHP achieved its best ever result in a free and fair multi-party election under Ecevit, when in 1977, the party received 41% of the vote. The 1970s featured constant changes in government between the CHP and the Justice Party, as well as intense political violence. This resulted in a military coup in 1980, and the banning of every political party in the aftermath.[33]

After the 1980 military coup, pre-1980 politicians were imprisoned and banned from politics, and both the name "Republican People's Party" and the abbreviation of "CHP" were banned. Until 1999, Turkey was ruled by the centre-right Motherland Party (ANAP) and the True Path Party (DYP), unofficial successors of the Democrat Party and the Justice Party, as well as, briefly, by the Islamic Welfare Party. CHP supporters also established successor parties. By 1985, Erdal İnönü, İsmet İnönü's son, consolidated two successor parties to form the Social Democratic Populist Party (SHP), while the Democratic Left Party (Turkish: Demokratik Sol Parti, DSP) was formed by Rahşan Ecevit, Bülent Ecevit's wife (Bülent Ecevit took over the DSP in 1987). After the ban on pre-1980 politicians was lifted in 1987, Deniz Baykal refounded the CHP in 1992, and the SHP merged with the party in 1995. However, Ecevit's DSP remained separate, and to this day has not merged with the reformed Republican People's Party.[34] While Baykal's CHP was more centrist compared to Ecevit's DSP, observers noted that the two parties held similar ideologies and split the Kemalist vote. From 1991 to 1996, the SHP and then the CHP were in coalition governments with the DYP. The CHP supported Mesut Yılmaz's coalition government after the collapse of the Welfare-DYP coalition following the 28 February "post-modern coup." However, due to the Türkbank scandal, the CHP withdrew its support and helped depose the government with a no confidence vote. Ecevit's DSP formed an interim-government, during which the PKK leader Abdullah Öcalan was captured in Kenya. As such, in the election of 1999, the DSP benefited massively in the polls at the expense of CHP, and the party failed to exceed the 10% threshold (8.7% vote), not winning any seats.

In the 2002 general election, the CHP came back with 20% of the vote but 32% of the seats in parliament, as only it and the new AKP (Justice and Development Party) received above the 10% threshold to enter parliament. With the collapse of DSP, CHP has been Turkey's main Kemalist and center-left party. It also became the second largest party and the main opposition party, a position it has retained since. Since the dramatic 2002 election, the CHP has been racked by internal power struggles, and has been outclassed by the AKP governments of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Many on the left were critical of the leadership of CHP, especially Baykal, who they complained was stifling the party of young blood by turning away the young who turn either to apathy or even vote for the AKP. Between 2002 and 2010, Turkey held three general elections and two local elections, all of which the CHP received between 18-23% of the vote. On 10 May 2010, Deniz Baykal announced his resignation as leader of the Republican People's Party after a clandestinely made video tape of him sitting on a bed with a woman was leaked to the media.[35] Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu was elected to be the new party leader, and returned the party back to its traditional centre-left position. However even with Kılıçdaroğlu at the helm, after four general elections the CHP has still not won an election, receiving between only 22 and 26% of the vote in parliamentary elections. CHP and MHP's joint candidate for the 2014 presidential election Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu lost to Erdoğan with only 38% of the vote.

 
Party's performance in the 2019 Turkish local elections by province.

In the 2018 general election the CHP, Good Party, Felicity, and Democrat Party established the Nation Alliance to challenge the AKP and MHP's People's Alliance. Though CHP's vote was reduced to 22%, strategic voting for the other parties yielded the alliance 33% of the vote. Their candidate for president: Muharrem İnce, received only 30% of the vote. The Nation Alliance was re-established for the 2019 local elections, which saw great gains for the CHP, capturing nearly 30% of the electorate and the municipal mayoralties of İstanbul and Ankara. Some consider their new respective mayors Ekrem İmamoğlu and Mansur Yavaş possible candidates for the upcoming 2023 presidential election. Kılıçdaroğlu and his counterpart in the Good Party Meral Akşener continue a close cooperation as leaders of opposition parties, and the two parties are gaining in the polls due to the ongoing economic crisis and government mismanagement of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Electorate

 
Party headquarters in Ankara, showing a banner urging a "no" vote in the 2017 referendum on establishing a presidential system.

The Republican People's Party is a centre-left political party that draws its support from professional middle-class secular and liberally religious voters. It has traditional ties to the middle and upper-middle classes such as white-collar workers, retired generals, and government bureaucrats as well as academics, college students, left-leaning intellectuals and labour unions such as DİSK.[21] The distance between the party administration and many leftist grassroots, especially left-oriented Kurdish voters, contributed to the party's shift away from the political left.[36] Leftists still criticize the party's continuous opposition to the removal of Article 301 of the Turkish penal code, which caused people to be prosecuted for "insulting Turkishness" including Elif Şafak and Nobel Prize winner author Orhan Pamuk, its conviction of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, its attitude towards minorities in Turkey, as well as its Cyprus policy.

The CHP draws much of their support from voters of big cities and coastal regions. The party's strongholds are the west of the Aegean Region (İzmir, Aydın, Muğla), the northwest of the Marmara Region (Turkish Thrace; Edirne, Kırklareli, Tekirdağ, Çanakkale), the east of the Black Sea Region (Ardahan and Artvin), and the Anatolian college town of Eskişehir.

The party also appeals to minority groups such as Alevis. According to The Economist, "to the dismay of its own leadership the CHP’s core constituency, as well as most of its MPs, are Alevis."[37] The party's leader, Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, is also an Alevi himself.[38]

The party holds a significant position in the Socialist International, Progressive Alliance and is an associate member of the Party of European Socialists. In 2014 the CHP urged the Socialist International to accept the Republican Turkish Party of Northern Cyprus as an full member.[39]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Turkey and the current economic crisis,[40] polls indicate the party and its alliance has been seeing increasing support, especially among youth.[41][42][43][44][45]

Internal caucuses

CHP has several internal caucuses.[46]

  • Kılıçdaroğlu group (Kılıçdaroğlu grubu), a caucus that is in favor of Nation Alliance and leadership of Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu.
  • 10 December Movement (10 Aralık Hareketi), a caucus founded by former DİSK secretary Süleyman Çelebi to create an alternative "new party". It defends social democracy and federalism, while opposing Kemalism and unitarism within the party. They have included ÖDP, SHP, DSP and independent left candidates in their tickets.[47]
  • İnce group (İnce grubu), a caucus that endorsed Muharrem İnce's presidential candidacy and opposition within the party. It includes Kemalist and Ulusalcı circles. In 2021 Muharrem İnce broke away from the CHP, and founded the Homeland Party.
  • Baykal group (Baykal grubu), a caucus that is founded by names loyal to Deniz Baykal. It lost its significance due to Baykal's stagnating health.
  • Left Wing for the Future (Gelecek İçin Sol Kanat), a left-populist caucus that aims to build "new left politics" within the party. It includes social democrat and democratic socialist groups within, and integrates ideas like participatory democracy, anti-militarism and anti-imperialism to mainstream republicanism. On 1 July 2021, We for the Future group decided to merge with another internal caucus, the 'Left Wing'. The name of the new group has been announced as 'Left Wing for the Future'.[48]
  • Youth group (Gençler grubu), the caucus that is founded by young central committee members to target the youth. It pushes a centrist agenda within the party.

Historical leaders

No. Name
(Born–Died)
Portrait Term in Office
1 Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
(1881–1938)
  9 September 1923 10 November 1938
2 İsmet İnönü
(1884–1973)
  26 December 1938 8 May 1972
3 Bülent Ecevit
(1925–2006)
  14 May 1972 30 October 1980
Party closed down following the 12 September 1980 coup d'état
4 Deniz Baykal
(1938–)
  9 September 1992 18 February 1995
5 Hikmet Çetin
(1937–)
  18 February 1995 9 September 1995
(4) Deniz Baykal
(1938–)
  9 September 1995 23 May 1999
6 Altan Öymen
(1932–)
  23 May 1999 30 September 2000
(4) Deniz Baykal
(1938–)
  30 September 2000 10 May 2010
7 Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu
(1948–)
  22 May 2010 Incumbent

Election results

General elections

General election record of the Republican People's Party (CHP)
     0–10%         10–20%         20–30%         30–40%         40–50%         50–60%         60–70%
Election Leader Vote Seats Changes Result Outcome Map
1927  
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
335 / 335
  3 1st
Majority government
1931
287 / 317
  48 1st
Majority government
1935
401 / 428
  114 1st
Majority government
1939  
İsmet İnönü
unknown / 470 1st
Majority government
1943 unknown / 492 1st
Majority government
1946
397 / 503
  73 1st
Majority government
1950 3,176,561
69 / 492
  328 39.45% 2nd
Main opposition
1954 3,161,696
31 / 537
  38 35.36%
  4.09 pp
2nd
Main opposition
1957 3,753,136
178 / 602
 147 41.09%
  4.73 pp
2nd
Main opposition
1961 3,724,752
173 / 450
  5 36.74%
  4.35 pp
1st
Minority government
1965 2,675,785
134 / 450
  39 28.75%
  7.99 pp
2nd
Main opposition
1969 2,487,163
143 / 450
  9 27.37%
  1.38 pp
2nd
Main opposition
1973  
Bülent Ecevit
3,570,583
185 / 450
  42 33.30%
  5.93 pp
1st
Minority government
1977 Turkish general election  
6,136,171
213 / 450
  28 41.38%
  8.09 pp
1st
Minority government
 
6 November 1983 Party closed following the 1980 Turkish coup d'état and succeeded by the Populist Party (1983–85), the Social Democracy Party (1983-85) and the Social Democratic Populist Party (SHP) in 1985 after the latter two parties merged. The CHP was re-established in 1992 by dissident SHP members after banned political parties were allowed to re-establish, with the SHP and CHP merging in 1995.
29 October 1987
20 October 1991
24 December 1995  
Deniz Baykal
 
3,011,076
49 / 550
  49 10.71%
  10.71 pp
5th
In opposition
 
18 April 1999  
2,716,094
0 / 550
  49 8.71%
  2.00 pp
6th
Not in parliament
 
3 November 2002  
6,113,352
178 / 550
  178 19.39%
  10.68 pp
2nd
Main opposition
 
22 July 2007  
7,317,808
112 / 550
  66 20.88%
  1.50 pp
2nd
Main opposition
 
12 June 2011  
Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu
 
11,155,972
135 / 550
  23 25.98%
  5.10 pp
2nd
Main opposition
 
7 June 2015  
11,518,139
132 / 550
  3 24.95%
  1.03 pp
2nd
Main opposition
 
1 November 2015  
12,111,812
134 / 550
  2 25.32%
  0.37 pp
2nd
Main opposition
 
24 June 2018  
11,348,899
146 / 600
  12 22.64%
  2.68 pp
2nd
Main opposition
 

Presidential elections

Presidential election record of the Republican People's Party (CHP)
Election Candidate Votes % Outcome Map
10 August 2014  
Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu
Cross-party with MHP
15,587,720 38.44% 2nd  
24 June 2018  
Muharrem İnce
15,340,321 30.64% 2nd  

Senate elections

Election date Party leader Number of votes received Percentage of votes Number of senators
1961 İsmet İnönü 3,734,285 36,1% 36
1964 İsmet İnönü 1,125,783 40,8% 19
1966 İsmet İnönü 877,066 29,6% 13
1968 İsmet İnönü 899,444 27,1% 13
1973 Bülent Ecevit 1,412,051 33,6% 25
1975 Bülent Ecevit 2,281,470 43,4% 25
1977 Bülent Ecevit 2,037,875 42,4% 28
1979 Bülent Ecevit 1,378,224 29,1% 12

Local elections

Election date Party leader Provincial council votes Percentage of votes Number of municipalities
1963 İsmet İnönü 3,458,972 36,22% No data
1968 İsmet İnönü 2,542,644 27,90% No data
1973 Bülent Ecevit 3,708,687 37,09% No data
1977 Bülent Ecevit 5,161,426 41,73% No data
1994 Deniz Baykal 1,297,371 4,61% 64
1999 Deniz Baykal 3,487,483 11,08% 373
2004 Deniz Baykal 5,848,180 18,38% 392
2009 Deniz Baykal 9,233,662 23,11% 499[49]
2014 Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu 10,938,262 26,34% 232
2019 Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu 12,625,346 29,36% 241

See also

References

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  37. ^ "Identity: Proud to be a Turk: But what does it mean?". The Economist. 6 February 2016. Retrieved 8 February 2016.
  38. ^ "Kılıçdaroğlu Alevi olduğu için Erdoğan yüzde 67 oy alacak". odatv.com (in Turkish). Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  39. ^ "Parti Tüzüğü" (in Turkish). cumhuriyetciturkpartisi.org. 22 May 2016. Retrieved 17 July 2019.
  40. ^ "Dar gelirli seçmen anketi: AKP düşüyor, HDP yükselişte". Tele1 (in Turkish). 9 September 2021. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  41. ^ "AKP'de Z kuşağı endişesi Erdoğan'a şarkı söylettirdi". cumhuriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  42. ^ "Son anket: Yandaş anket şirketinden Erdoğan'a kötü haber!". cumhuriyet.com.tr (in Turkish). Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  43. ^ "CHP'nin oyları yükseliyor!". Yurt Gazetesi (in Turkish). Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  44. ^ "Metropoll'den gündeme damga vuracak 'Z kuşağı' anketi: 'Kararsız', 'protesto oy' ve 'cevap yok' şıkkına yüklendiler". Haberler.com (in Turkish). 5 July 2021. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  45. ^ "Turkey's Generation Z: A Youth Challenge to Erdoğan". Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies. 10 August 2020. Retrieved 18 September 2021.
  46. ^ "CHP içinde hangi gruplar ne için mücadele veriyor?".
  47. ^ "Kurultay yaklaşırken CHP'de hangi isimler ve gruplar etkin?". 26 November 2019.
  48. ^ "CHP içindeki iki sol grup birleşti, 'Gelecek İçin Sol Kanat' adını aldı".
  49. ^ Seçim 2005[permanent dead link], ntvmsnbc

External links

  • Official website  

republican, people, party, this, article, about, political, party, turkey, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, expanded, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, turkish, 2021, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, tr. This article is about the political party in Turkey For other uses see Republican People s Party disambiguation This article may be expanded with text translated from the corresponding article in Turkish May 2021 Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 439 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Turkish Wikipedia article at tr Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated tr Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation The Republican People s Party Turkish Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi pronounced dʒumhuːɾiˈjet haɫk paɾtisi listen acronymized as CHP dʒeːheːpeˑ is a Kemalist and social democratic political party in Turkey which currently stands as the main opposition party 11 7 It is also the oldest political party in Turkey founded by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk the first president and founder of the modern Turkish Republic The party is also cited as the founding party of modern Turkey 12 The CHP describes itself as a modern social democratic party which is faithful to the founding principles and values of the Republic of Turkey 13 14 Its logo consists of the Six Arrows which represent the foundational principles of Kemalism republicanism reformism laicism Laicite Secularism populism nationalism and statism It is the main opposition party to the ruling conservative Justice and Development Party AKP in the Grand National Assembly with 135 MPs Republican People s Party Cumhuriyet Halk PartisiAbbreviationCHPLeaderKemal KilicdarogluSecretary GeneralSelin Sayek BokeSpokespersonFaik OztrakFounderMustafa Kemal AtaturkFounded7 September 1919 1919 09 07 as a resistance organisation 9 September 1923 1923 09 09 as a political party 9 September 1992 1992 09 09 re establishment Preceded byCommittee of Union and Progress 1 2 3 Association for the Defence of the Rights of Anatolia and RumeliaHeadquartersAnadolu Bulvari No 12 Cankaya AnkaraStudent wingHalk Lis Halkci Liseliler Youth wingCHP YouthWomen s wingCHP Kadin KollariNGOAtaturkist Thought Association unofficial SODEV unofficial Membership 2022 1 369 430 4 IdeologyKemalism 5 Social democracy 6 7 Pro Europeanism 8 Political positionCentre left 9 National affiliationNation AllianceEuropean affiliationParty of European Socialists associate International affiliationProgressive Alliance 10 Socialist InternationalColours RedSlogan People First Unity First Turkey First Grand National Assembly134 600Metropolitan municipalities11 30District municipalities241 1 351Provincial councilors184 1 251Municipal Assemblies4 638 20 498Election symbolThe Six ArrowsParty flagWebsitewww wbr chp wbr org wbr trPolitics of TurkeyPolitical partiesElectionsThe political party has its origins in the various resistance groups founded during the Turkish War of Independence Under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk they united in the 1919 Sivas Congress On 9 September 1923 the People s Party declared itself to be a political organisation and on 29 October 1923 announced the establishment of the Turkish Republic with Ataturk as its first president In 1924 the People s Party renamed itself the Republican People s Party As Turkey moved into its one party period the CHP was the apparatus of implementing far reaching political cultural social and economic reforms in the country After World War II Ataturk s successor Ismet Inonu allowed for multi party elections and the party initiated a peaceful transition of power after losing the 1950 election ending the one party period and starting Turkey s multi party period The years following the 1960 military coup saw the party gradually trend towards the center left which was cemented once Bulent Ecevit became chairman in 1972 The CHP along with all other political parties of the time was banned by the military junta of 1980 The CHP was re established with its original name and a more centrist outlook by Deniz Baykal on 9 September 1992 with the participation of a majority of its members from the pre 1980 period Kemal Kilicdaroglu has returned the party back to its traditional centre left position when he took over in 2011 It is a founding party of the Nation Alliance 15 a coalition consisting of opposition parties like the Good Party Felicity Party and Democrat Party against the ruling AKP and their People s Alliance 16 In addition CHP is an associate member of the Party of European Socialists PES a member of the Socialist International 17 and the Progressive Alliance Many politicians of CHP have declared their support for LGBT rights 18 19 20 and the feminist movement in Turkey The party continues its Pro European policies and commitment to NATO The party s base includes the middle and upper middle classes such as white collar workers retired generals government bureaucrats academics college students left leaning intellectuals labour unions such as DISK and Alevis 21 The party s strongholds include the Western Aegean region Izmir Aydin Mugla Thrace the east of the Black Sea Region Ardahan and Artvin and the Anatolian college town of Eskisehir 22 Contents 1 History 2 Electorate 3 Internal caucuses 4 Historical leaders 5 Election results 5 1 General elections 5 2 Presidential elections 5 3 Senate elections 5 4 Local elections 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditMain article History of the Republican People s PartyThe Republican People s Party has its origins in the resistance organizations known as Defence of Rights Associations created in the immediate aftermath of World War I in the Turkish War of Independence In the Sivas Congress Mustafa Kemal Pasha Ataturk and his colleagues united the Defence of Rights Associations into the Association for the Defence of National Rights of Anatolia and Rumelia Anadolu ve Rumeli Mudafaa i Hukuk Cemiyeti ADNRAR and called for elections in the Ottoman Empire to elect representatives associated with the organization to the Commmittee of Representation The Committee of Representation soon moved to Ankara and formed the Grand National Assembly as a counter parliament from the Ottoman government in Istanbul Grand National Assembly forces militarily defeated Greece France and Armenia overthrew the Ottoman government and abolished the monarchy After the 1923 election ADNRAR was transformed into a political party called the People s Party Halk Firkasi Because of the unanimity of the new parliament the republic was proclaimed the Treaty of Lausanne was ratified and the Caliphate was abolished the next year 23 In 1924 opposition to Mustafa Kemal Ataturk resulted in the foundation of the Progressive Republican Party TCF Reacting to the foundation of the TCF his People s Party changed its name to the Republican People s Party Cumhuriyet Halk Firkasi soon Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi CHP The life of the TCF was short The TCF faced allegations of involvement in the Sheikh Said rebellion and for conspiring with members of the Committee of Union and Progress to assassinate Ataturk in the Izmir Affair Because of this it was closed on 5 June by the government From 1925 until 1946 Turkey was under one party rule with one interruption another brief experiment of opposition politics through the formation of the Liberal Republican Party In the period of 1925 1930 the CHP introduced sweeping reforms transforming Turkey into a modern state In the period of 1930 1939 Ataturk s CHP clarified its ideology by adopting the Six Arrows as well as borrowing tenants from Communism and Fascism 24 It was during the one party period that Inspectorates General Independence Tribunals and military force were employed by Ataturk to suppress opposition to his nationalist reforms at the expense of religious conservatives and Kurds In the parties third convention the party clarified their approach towards the religious minorities of the Christians and the Jews accepting them as real Turks as long as they adhere to the national ideal and use the Turkish language 25 On 12 November 1938 the day after Mustafa Kemal Ataturk s death his ally Ismet Inonu was elected the second president 26 and assumed leadership of the Republican People s Party Inonu s presidency saw the annexation of the Hatay State and the establishment of Village Institutes Inonu adopted a policy of neutrality despite attempts by the Allies and Axis powers to bring Turkey into World War II The party was associated with anti communism 27 28 29 In the aftermath of World War II Inonu called for a multi party general election in 1946 the first multi party election in the country s history The Motion with Four Signatures resulted in the resignation of some CHP members who then founded the Democrat Party DP which challenged the party in the election The result was a victory for the CHP which won 395 of the 465 seats amid criticism that the election did not live up to democratic standards However four years later a more free and fair general election was held in 1950 that led to the CHP losing power to the DP Inonu presided over a peaceful transition of power The 1950 election marked the end of the CHP s last majority government The party has not been able to regain a parliamentary majority in any subsequent election since 30 Due to the winner take all system in place during the 1950s the DP achieved landslide victories in elections that were reasonably close meaning the CHP was in opposition for 10 years In its ninth congress in 1951 the youth branch and the women s branch were founded In 1953 the establishment of trade unions and vocational chambers was proposed and the right to strike for workers was added to the party program The Democrat Party was abolished after the 1960 military coup and Prime Minister Adnan Menderes Foreign Minister Fatin Rustu Zorlu and Finance Minister Hasan Polatkan were hanged in the Imrali island prison Right wing parties have since continuously attacked the CHP for their perceived involvement in the hanging of Adnan Menderes 31 With electoral law reform implementing proportional representation the CHP emerged as the first placed party at the general election of 1961 and formed a grand coalition with the Justice Party a successor party to the Democrat Party This was the first coalition government in Turkey which endured for seven months Inonu was able to form two more governments with other parties until the 1965 election Bulent Ecevit leader of the Democratic Left movement in the CHP contributed to the party adopting the Left of Centre Ortanin solu programme for that election 32 Inonu remained as opposition leader and the leader of the CHP until 8 May 1972 when he was overthrown as party leader by Ecevit in a party congress Ecevit adopted a distinct left wing role in politics and although remaining staunchly nationalist attempted to implement democratic socialism into the ideology of CHP Support for the party increased when Ecevit became prime minister in 1974 and invaded Cyprus The CHP achieved its best ever result in a free and fair multi party election under Ecevit when in 1977 the party received 41 of the vote The 1970s featured constant changes in government between the CHP and the Justice Party as well as intense political violence This resulted in a military coup in 1980 and the banning of every political party in the aftermath 33 After the 1980 military coup pre 1980 politicians were imprisoned and banned from politics and both the name Republican People s Party and the abbreviation of CHP were banned Until 1999 Turkey was ruled by the centre right Motherland Party ANAP and the True Path Party DYP unofficial successors of the Democrat Party and the Justice Party as well as briefly by the Islamic Welfare Party CHP supporters also established successor parties By 1985 Erdal Inonu Ismet Inonu s son consolidated two successor parties to form the Social Democratic Populist Party SHP while the Democratic Left Party Turkish Demokratik Sol Parti DSP was formed by Rahsan Ecevit Bulent Ecevit s wife Bulent Ecevit took over the DSP in 1987 After the ban on pre 1980 politicians was lifted in 1987 Deniz Baykal refounded the CHP in 1992 and the SHP merged with the party in 1995 However Ecevit s DSP remained separate and to this day has not merged with the reformed Republican People s Party 34 While Baykal s CHP was more centrist compared to Ecevit s DSP observers noted that the two parties held similar ideologies and split the Kemalist vote From 1991 to 1996 the SHP and then the CHP were in coalition governments with the DYP The CHP supported Mesut Yilmaz s coalition government after the collapse of the Welfare DYP coalition following the 28 February post modern coup However due to the Turkbank scandal the CHP withdrew its support and helped depose the government with a no confidence vote Ecevit s DSP formed an interim government during which the PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan was captured in Kenya As such in the election of 1999 the DSP benefited massively in the polls at the expense of CHP and the party failed to exceed the 10 threshold 8 7 vote not winning any seats Kemal Kilicdaroglu during the 2017 March for JusticeIn the 2002 general election the CHP came back with 20 of the vote but 32 of the seats in parliament as only it and the new AKP Justice and Development Party received above the 10 threshold to enter parliament With the collapse of DSP CHP has been Turkey s main Kemalist and center left party It also became the second largest party and the main opposition party a position it has retained since Since the dramatic 2002 election the CHP has been racked by internal power struggles and has been outclassed by the AKP governments of Recep Tayyip Erdogan Many on the left were critical of the leadership of CHP especially Baykal who they complained was stifling the party of young blood by turning away the young who turn either to apathy or even vote for the AKP Between 2002 and 2010 Turkey held three general elections and two local elections all of which the CHP received between 18 23 of the vote On 10 May 2010 Deniz Baykal announced his resignation as leader of the Republican People s Party after a clandestinely made video tape of him sitting on a bed with a woman was leaked to the media 35 Kemal Kilicdaroglu was elected to be the new party leader and returned the party back to its traditional centre left position However even with Kilicdaroglu at the helm after four general elections the CHP has still not won an election receiving between only 22 and 26 of the vote in parliamentary elections CHP and MHP s joint candidate for the 2014 presidential election Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu lost to Erdogan with only 38 of the vote Party s performance in the 2019 Turkish local elections by province In the 2018 general election the CHP Good Party Felicity and Democrat Party established the Nation Alliance to challenge the AKP and MHP s People s Alliance Though CHP s vote was reduced to 22 strategic voting for the other parties yielded the alliance 33 of the vote Their candidate for president Muharrem Ince received only 30 of the vote The Nation Alliance was re established for the 2019 local elections which saw great gains for the CHP capturing nearly 30 of the electorate and the municipal mayoralties of Istanbul and Ankara Some consider their new respective mayors Ekrem Imamoglu and Mansur Yavas possible candidates for the upcoming 2023 presidential election Kilicdaroglu and his counterpart in the Good Party Meral Aksener continue a close cooperation as leaders of opposition parties and the two parties are gaining in the polls due to the ongoing economic crisis and government mismanagement of the COVID 19 pandemic Electorate EditSee also Opinion polling for the 2023 Turkish general election Party headquarters in Ankara showing a banner urging a no vote in the 2017 referendum on establishing a presidential system The Republican People s Party is a centre left political party that draws its support from professional middle class secular and liberally religious voters It has traditional ties to the middle and upper middle classes such as white collar workers retired generals and government bureaucrats as well as academics college students left leaning intellectuals and labour unions such as DISK 21 The distance between the party administration and many leftist grassroots especially left oriented Kurdish voters contributed to the party s shift away from the political left 36 Leftists still criticize the party s continuous opposition to the removal of Article 301 of the Turkish penal code which caused people to be prosecuted for insulting Turkishness including Elif Safak and Nobel Prize winner author Orhan Pamuk its conviction of Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink its attitude towards minorities in Turkey as well as its Cyprus policy The CHP draws much of their support from voters of big cities and coastal regions The party s strongholds are the west of the Aegean Region Izmir Aydin Mugla the northwest of the Marmara Region Turkish Thrace Edirne Kirklareli Tekirdag Canakkale the east of the Black Sea Region Ardahan and Artvin and the Anatolian college town of Eskisehir The party also appeals to minority groups such as Alevis According to The Economist to the dismay of its own leadership the CHP s core constituency as well as most of its MPs are Alevis 37 The party s leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu is also an Alevi himself 38 The party holds a significant position in the Socialist International Progressive Alliance and is an associate member of the Party of European Socialists In 2014 the CHP urged the Socialist International to accept the Republican Turkish Party of Northern Cyprus as an full member 39 Due to the COVID 19 pandemic in Turkey and the current economic crisis 40 polls indicate the party and its alliance has been seeing increasing support especially among youth 41 42 43 44 45 Internal caucuses EditCHP has several internal caucuses 46 Kilicdaroglu group Kilicdaroglu grubu a caucus that is in favor of Nation Alliance and leadership of Kemal Kilicdaroglu 10 December Movement 10 Aralik Hareketi a caucus founded by former DISK secretary Suleyman Celebi to create an alternative new party It defends social democracy and federalism while opposing Kemalism and unitarism within the party They have included ODP SHP DSP and independent left candidates in their tickets 47 Ince group Ince grubu a caucus that endorsed Muharrem Ince s presidential candidacy and opposition within the party It includes Kemalist and Ulusalci circles In 2021 Muharrem Ince broke away from the CHP and founded the Homeland Party Baykal group Baykal grubu a caucus that is founded by names loyal to Deniz Baykal It lost its significance due to Baykal s stagnating health Left Wing for the Future Gelecek Icin Sol Kanat a left populist caucus that aims to build new left politics within the party It includes social democrat and democratic socialist groups within and integrates ideas like participatory democracy anti militarism and anti imperialism to mainstream republicanism On 1 July 2021 We for the Future group decided to merge with another internal caucus the Left Wing The name of the new group has been announced as Left Wing for the Future 48 Youth group Gencler grubu the caucus that is founded by young central committee members to target the youth It pushes a centrist agenda within the party Historical leaders EditNo Name Born Died Portrait Term in Office1 Mustafa Kemal Ataturk 1881 1938 9 September 1923 10 November 19382 Ismet Inonu 1884 1973 26 December 1938 8 May 19723 Bulent Ecevit 1925 2006 14 May 1972 30 October 1980Party closed down following the 12 September 1980 coup d etat4 Deniz Baykal 1938 9 September 1992 18 February 19955 Hikmet Cetin 1937 18 February 1995 9 September 1995 4 Deniz Baykal 1938 9 September 1995 23 May 19996 Altan Oymen 1932 23 May 1999 30 September 2000 4 Deniz Baykal 1938 30 September 2000 10 May 20107 Kemal Kilicdaroglu 1948 22 May 2010 IncumbentElection results EditGeneral elections Edit General election record of the Republican People s Party CHP 0 10 10 20 20 30 30 40 40 50 50 60 60 70 Election Leader Vote Seats Changes Result Outcome Map1927 Mustafa Kemal Ataturk 335 335 3 1st Majority government1931 287 317 48 1st Majority government1935 401 428 114 1st Majority government1939 Ismet Inonu unknown 470 1st Majority government1943 unknown 492 1st Majority government1946 397 503 73 1st Majority government1950 3 176 561 69 492 328 39 45 2ndMain opposition1954 3 161 696 31 537 38 35 36 4 09 pp 2ndMain opposition1957 3 753 136 178 602 147 41 09 4 73 pp 2ndMain opposition1961 3 724 752 173 450 5 36 74 4 35 pp 1st Minority government1965 2 675 785 134 450 39 28 75 7 99 pp 2ndMain opposition1969 2 487 163 143 450 9 27 37 1 38 pp 2ndMain opposition1973 Bulent Ecevit 3 570 583 185 450 42 33 30 5 93 pp 1st Minority government1977 Turkish general election 6 136 171 213 450 28 41 38 8 09 pp 1st Minority government 6 November 1983 Party closed following the 1980 Turkish coup d etat and succeeded by the Populist Party 1983 85 the Social Democracy Party 1983 85 and the Social Democratic Populist Party SHP in 1985 after the latter two parties merged The CHP was re established in 1992 by dissident SHP members after banned political parties were allowed to re establish with the SHP and CHP merging in 1995 29 October 198720 October 199124 December 1995 Deniz Baykal 3 011 076 49 550 49 10 71 10 71 pp 5thIn opposition 18 April 1999 2 716 094 0 550 49 8 71 2 00 pp 6thNot in parliament 3 November 2002 6 113 352 178 550 178 19 39 10 68 pp 2ndMain opposition 22 July 2007 7 317 808 112 550 66 20 88 1 50 pp 2ndMain opposition 12 June 2011 Kemal Kilicdaroglu 11 155 972 135 550 23 25 98 5 10 pp 2ndMain opposition 7 June 2015 11 518 139 132 550 3 24 95 1 03 pp 2ndMain opposition 1 November 2015 12 111 812 134 550 2 25 32 0 37 pp 2ndMain opposition 24 June 2018 11 348 899 146 600 12 22 64 2 68 pp 2ndMain opposition Presidential elections Edit Presidential election record of the Republican People s Party CHP Election Candidate Votes Outcome Map10 August 2014 Ekmeleddin IhsanogluCross party with MHP 15 587 720 38 44 2nd 24 June 2018 Muharrem Ince 15 340 321 30 64 2nd Senate elections Edit Election date Party leader Number of votes received Percentage of votes Number of senators1961 Ismet Inonu 3 734 285 36 1 361964 Ismet Inonu 1 125 783 40 8 191966 Ismet Inonu 877 066 29 6 131968 Ismet Inonu 899 444 27 1 131973 Bulent Ecevit 1 412 051 33 6 251975 Bulent Ecevit 2 281 470 43 4 251977 Bulent Ecevit 2 037 875 42 4 281979 Bulent Ecevit 1 378 224 29 1 12Local elections Edit Election date Party leader Provincial council votes Percentage of votes Number of municipalities1963 Ismet Inonu 3 458 972 36 22 No data1968 Ismet Inonu 2 542 644 27 90 No data1973 Bulent Ecevit 3 708 687 37 09 No data1977 Bulent Ecevit 5 161 426 41 73 No data1994 Deniz Baykal 1 297 371 4 61 641999 Deniz Baykal 3 487 483 11 08 3732004 Deniz Baykal 5 848 180 18 38 3922009 Deniz Baykal 9 233 662 23 11 499 49 2014 Kemal Kilicdaroglu 10 938 262 26 34 2322019 Kemal Kilicdaroglu 12 625 346 29 36 241See also EditIndependent Group Turkey List of political parties in Turkey SODEP Ulus The Six Arrows flag of CHP UlusalcilikReferences Edit Yenen Alp 2018 Elusive forces in illusive eyes British officialdom s perception of the Anatolian resistance movement Middle Eastern Studies 54 5 788 810 doi 10 1080 00263206 2018 1462161 hdl 1887 74261 S2CID 150032953 Zurcher Erik J 1992 The Ottoman Legacy of the Turkish Republic An Attempt at a New Periodization Die Welt des Islams 32 2 237 253 doi 10 2307 1570835 ISSN 0043 2539 JSTOR 1570835 Ungor Ugur Umit 2008 Geographies of Nationalism and Violence Rethinking Young Turk Social Engineering European Journal of Turkish Studies Social Sciences on Contemporary Turkey 7 doi 10 4000 ejts 2583 ISSN 1773 0546 Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi in Turkish Court of Cassation Retrieved January 10 2022 Liza Mugge 2013 Brussels Calling The European organisation of migrants from Turkey In Dirk Halm Zeynep Sezgin eds Migration and Organized Civil Society Rethinking National Policy Routledge p 167 ISBN 978 1 136 24650 0 Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi Parti Ici Egitim Birimi PDF a b The Republican People s Party CHP is Complicit in the Erosion of Democracy in Turkey Georgetown Journal of International Affairs 6 August 2020 Retrieved 1 February 2022 Alfred Stepan Ahmet T Kuru eds 2012 The European Union and the Justice and Development Party Democracy Islam and Secularism in Turkey Columbia University Press p 184 paragraph 2 ISBN 9780231159333 Uras Umut 29 March 2019 New test for Erdogan What s at stake in Turkish local elections Istanbul Al Jazeera Retrieved 15 July 2019 Parties amp Organisations Progressive Alliance Retrieved 19 April 2019 History of the CHP chp org tr in Turkish Retrieved 18 September 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Ciddi Sinan 2009 Kemalism in Turkish Politics The Republican People s Party Secularism and Nationalism Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 415 47504 4 Secim Bildirgesi Election Manifesto Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi page 4 in Turkish Archived 27 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine Nordsieck Wolfram 2018 Turkey Parties and Elections in Europe Retrieved 1 September 2018 The Nation Alliance officially forms amp dw com in Turkish Retrieved 18 September 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Millet ittifaki resmen kuruldu Protokolun detaylari ortaya cikti cumhuriyet com tr Retrieved 18 September 2021 Socialist International List of member parties Archived 7 August 2007 at the Wayback Machine CHP li Boke den Alperen Ocaklari na sert tepki Tehdide seyirci kalmayiz CHP li Mahmut Tanal Trans Onur Yuruyusu nde TOMA nin uzerine cikti CHP den LGBT ler icin Is Kanunu teklifi a b CHP li Kani Beko Grevin kazanani olmaz in Turkish t24 com tr 3 March 2019 Retrieved 17 July 2019 CHP Secim Sonuclari 31 Mart 2019 CHP Yerel Secim Sonuclari Sozcu in Turkish Retrieved 18 September 2021 Murat Sofuglu 26 January 2018 Turks still debate whether Treaty of Lausanne was fair to Turkey TRT World Retrieved 17 July 2019 Malik Mufti 2009 Daring and Caution in Turkish Strategic Culture Republic at Sea Palgrave Macmillan UK p 233 ISBN 9780230236387 Bali Rifat N Kieser Hans Lukas ed Turkey Beyond Nationalism I B Tauris p 48 ISBN 978 1 84511 141 0 Macfie A L 2014 Ataturk Routledge p 182 ISBN 978 1 138 83 647 1 Demirci Fatih Kadro Hareketi ve Kadrocular Dumlupinar Universitesi Sosyal Bilimler Dergisi 2006 sayi 15 Erguder J 1927 Komunist Tevkifati Istanbul Agir Ceza Mahkemesindeki Durusma Birikim Yayinlari Istanbul 1978 Basvekalet Kararlar Dairesi Mudurlugu 15 Aralik 1937 tarih 7829 nolu kararname Retrieved 9 February 2019 Manuel Alvarez Rivera Election Resources on the Internet Elections to the Turkish Grand National Assembly Retrieved 17 July 2019 Inonu nun MBK ye gonderdigi Menderes mektubu Ensonhaber 24 September 2012 Gulsum Tutuncu Esmer Propaganda Soylem ve Sloganlarla Ortanin Solu PDF in Turkish Dokuz Eylul University Retrieved 17 July 2019 Ustel Aziz 14 July 2008 Savci Ergenekon u Kenan Evren e sormali asil Star Gazete in Turkish Retrieved 7 July 2019 Ciddi Sinan 13 January 2009 Kemalism in Turkish Politics The Republican People s Party Secularism and Nationalism Routledge p 79 ISBN 9781134025596 Turkish opposition leader quits over sex tape BBC News 10 May 2010 Gunes Ayata 1992 CHP Orgut ve Ideoloji Gundogan Yayinlari p 320 ISBN 9755200452 Identity Proud to be a Turk But what does it mean The Economist 6 February 2016 Retrieved 8 February 2016 Kilicdaroglu Alevi oldugu icin Erdogan yuzde 67 oy alacak odatv com in Turkish Retrieved 25 April 2018 Parti Tuzugu in Turkish cumhuriyetciturkpartisi org 22 May 2016 Retrieved 17 July 2019 Dar gelirli secmen anketi AKP dusuyor HDP yukseliste Tele1 in Turkish 9 September 2021 Retrieved 18 September 2021 AKP de Z kusagi endisesi Erdogan a sarki soylettirdi cumhuriyet com tr in Turkish Retrieved 18 September 2021 Son anket Yandas anket sirketinden Erdogan a kotu haber cumhuriyet com tr in Turkish Retrieved 18 September 2021 CHP nin oylari yukseliyor Yurt Gazetesi in Turkish Retrieved 18 September 2021 Metropoll den gundeme damga vuracak Z kusagi anketi Kararsiz protesto oy ve cevap yok sikkina yuklendiler Haberler com in Turkish 5 July 2021 Retrieved 18 September 2021 Turkey s Generation Z A Youth Challenge to Erdogan Begin Sadat Center for Strategic Studies 10 August 2020 Retrieved 18 September 2021 CHP icinde hangi gruplar ne icin mucadele veriyor Kurultay yaklasirken CHP de hangi isimler ve gruplar etkin 26 November 2019 CHP icindeki iki sol grup birlesti Gelecek Icin Sol Kanat adini aldi Secim 2005 permanent dead link ntvmsnbcExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Republican People s Party Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Republican People 27s Party amp oldid 1133514602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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