Turkish voters abroad complete their historic election

 


Tuesday saw the conclusion of voting among millions of Turks living abroad in a contentious election that has evolved into a critique of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's divisive two-decade reign.

The results of the presidential and legislative elections on Sunday will judge Turkiye's longest-serving leader and the socioeconomic revolution that his Islamic-rooted AKP party has been driving.

The vote is the toughest of the 69-year-old's rocky career and the most significant for Turkiye in decades.

According to polls, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, a secular challenger, and his strong coalition of six parties that cut over Turkiye's cultural and political divides are in a close race with Erdogan.

Turks who relocated to Western Europe from poorer regions as part of work programmes designed to address the continent's labour shortage after World War II cast the first ballots.

Of Turkiye's 64.1 million registered voters, these voters make up 3.4 million and frequently back more conservative politicians.

On the morning of the final day of abroad voting on Tuesday, the official turnout was above 51%, which was slightly higher than in the most recent general election that Erdogan won in 2018.

By setting up regular buses to transport voters to the Turkish Consulate in Berlin, Kilicdaroglu's CHP has been attempting to erode Erdogan's traditional base of support.

Nearly half of the votes cast by Turks living abroad are from Germany.


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