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Turkish President Erdogan is one step away from building a power centre unrivalled since the days of parliamentary founder Ataturk. Image Credit: AFP

ANKARA: Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s campaign to secure sweeping executive authority won approval of parliament early Saturday. Turks will have the final say in a referendum that could be held in early April.

The parliament voted 339-142 to make the president the head of the executive and abolish the job of prime minister, triggering a referendum on the proposal and putting Erdogan one step away from building a power centre unrivalled since the days of parliamentary founder Ataturk. In Turkey’s system, amendments to the constitution need to be approved by 367 of 550 members to become law. Proposals that get between 330 and 367 votes should be voted on by the public.

“The Turkish nation will make the final decision,” Prime Minister Binali Yildirim said after the voting.

As lawmakers from the ruling AK Party declared victory, legislators from opposition parties CHP and HDP warned that the attempt to transform Turkey’s government has polarised the nation. Erdogan’s supporters say it’s needed to overcome deepening security and economic challenges, while critics warn the overhaul would concentrate a dangerous amount of power in a single authority who has already embarked on a crackdown on political opponents, journalists, academics and activists.

“Turkey’s drift toward authoritarianism will accelerate in 2017 and the odds that President Erdogan will be able to achieve a formal, full executive presidency through a referendum on a new constitution are favourable,” Anthony Skinner, a director with UK-based forecasting company Verisk Maplecroft, said in a report published earlier this week. “This is partly a by-product of the nationalist fervour Erdogan has drummed up in the aftermath of a failed coup to unseat him in July 2016.”

While the AK Party lacks enough seats to carry parliament alone, the package was approved with backing from the nationalist MHP. Yildirim said on January 17 that his party was making the changes together with MHP. “We have no hesitation about the referendum,” the prime minister said.

‘One Man’

If the legislative package is approved in a referendum, Erdogan’s ties to the ruling AK Party will be immediately restored while most of the measures, including powers granted to Erdogan to call elections or declare state of emergency, will go into effect when the presidential and parliamentary elections are held on November 3, 2019. The legislative package, meanwhile, limits the parliament’s oversight over the executive branch and allows the president’s office to issue decrees with the force of law.

The constitutional change only secures “one man’s future,” Turkey’s main opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu said in his secular Republican People’s Party group meeting following the vote, state-run Anadolu Agency reported. “Turkey cannot stand this regime change. I believe our people will wreck this game that was played in the Parliament,” he said.

“The shift to a presidential system as outlined in the constitutional package will give Erdogan unparalleled power while the system of checks and balances has been literally thrown out of the window,” Teneo Intelligence co-president Wolfango Piccoli said in emailed comments on Wednesday. This raises concerns on “further interference in economic policymaking by an ever-more-powerful Erdogan.”

Erdogan’s proposal effectively “phases out the parliament and takes power away from the hands of the government,” said Ibrahim Kaboglu, a professor of constitutional law at Istanbul’s Marmara University. “The president moves to the centre of executive power, reshaping the country’s regime around one man.”

A survey by Istanbul-based pollster Sonar in December found that the ruling AK Party acting alone lacks the support to win a referendum. But when respondents were asked to assume that the nationalist opposition MHP backed the changes, the tally of “yes” votes rose to 55.1 per cent.

The 62-year-old Erdogan has been seeking to empower the presidency since his election in 2014 after more than a decade as prime minister. He seized on a tumultuous and bloody period — one punctuated by an attempted coup, war with Kurdish separatists and terrorist attacks claimed by Daesh — to press his case that Turkey needs a leader less restrained by political bureaucracy.

Bulent Turan, a whip from the Islamist-rooted AK Party, which Erdogan cofounded, rejected opposition claims that the amendments would create an elected dictatorship, saying they sought to allow for greater government oversight and to speed up decision making.

“The proposed system is a political model under which separation of powers is placed under the guarantee of law and makes the parliament superior over the government,” Mehmet Ucum, chief adviser to Erdogan, said on Thursday.

The main opposition party differs. Parliament will be left “without any power,” said Bulent Tezcan, deputy chairman of the Republican People’s Party. The presidential system would create a “one-man regime,” he said.

Tezcan’s colleague, Leyla Karabiyik, said Turks were being asked to believe that “a magic wand will solve economic problems, terrorism, unemployment and poverty.”

Turkey’s parliament was founded by Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1920 as part of a secular and Western-oriented revolution that replaced the theocratic Ottoman Empire. Should Erdogan succeed, Turkey is set to a have a president who will basically concentrate as much power as Ataturk.

Turkey has been drawn deeper into some of the region’s most intractable conflicts, especially in neighbouring Syria. Daesh militants based there have attacked Turkish cities and border posts, killing scores. A decades-old conflict with separatist Kurds has been reignited. Lawmakers from the pro-Kurdish HDP opposed the charter changes as 11 of its 59 lawmakers, including the top two leaders, remained jailed since Erdogan signed a constitutional amendment lifting their immunity from prosecution.

“The constitutional amendment will have a doping effect for our country when it goes into effect,” Erdogan said in Istanbul on January 14. “With God’s permission, no one will be able to stop the building of ‘New Turkey.’”

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