Mediterranean - Politics Turkey and the Balkans
Political Change in Turkey,
With Regard to Future Enlargements
of the European Union
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Kemal Dervis
Former Minister of Economic
Affairs, Turkey
Petek Gurbuz
International Secretary
of the Republican People’s
Party (CHP), Turkey
During 2002 and 2003 the European
Union made several advancements in
the enlargement process. Negotiations
were completed with ten of the
thirteen candidate countries, and the
Convention met and prepared a comprehensive
draft constitution for the
new Europe. The following phase of
the enlargement process will be concerned
with the membership of the
three remaining candidate countries:
Rumania, Bulgaria and Turkey. Negotiations
have started with Rumania and
Bulgaria. As for Turkey, at the Copenhagen
summit of December 2002 the
European Union leaders decided that
negotiations would start without delay
after the summit scheduled for December
2004, provided Turkey were
able to meet the criteria, common to all
candidate countries, referred to as the
Copenhagen criteria.
Turkey signed its association treaty
with «Europe» forty years ago in 1963.
Ever since the creation of the modern
Turkish republic in the 1920s, Turkey’s
aspirations have been in line with the
key elements of the «European Project»,
although each European country contributes
a specific and distinct historical
background to this project. The
modern and secular Turkish Republic
is a new state that emerged in the progress
of the twentieth century. However,
it is also the heir to the Ottoman
Empire, which itself in many ways was
the heir of the Eastern Roman Empire.
Istanbul, now the industrial, cultural
and financial centre of modern Turkey,
has been, throughout much of its history,
the leading city of South-Eastern
Europe. The current enlargement process
of the European Union is often
presented as a re-unification of Europe
after the fall of the Iron Curtain, and
Turkey brings a further very important
Mediterranean and historical dimension
to this reunification, with roots that
go back many centuries.
In Turkey, the last two years have been
marked by rapid and profound political
changes. In the general elections of
November 2002, the old multiparty political
structure was swept away and replaced
by a formation that resembles a
two party structure. The conservative
Justice and Development Party, with
its roots embedded in political Islam,
gained nearly thirty-four percent of the
vote and close to two thirds of parliamentary
seats, while the social-democratic
Republican People’s Party gained
close to twenty percent of the vote and
the remaining one third of seats in Parliament.
This rather extreme «magnification
» of the popular vote was due to the
ten percent minimum vote required for
a party to be represented in Parliament
by electoral law. Whether these results
will lead to a lasting two party system
remains to be seen. So far at least,
opinion polls suggest that the current
structure may continue to work in the
future. Much will depend on the results
of the municipal elections scheduled
for March 2004. The Justice and Development
Party has made important propositions
to the secular centre right,
and contains a centrist liberal wing
alongside its more traditionalist majority.
The Republican People’s Party,
member of the Socialist International
and associate member of the Party of
European Socialists, is going through
the kind of ideological debates the European
Left experienced throughout
the last two decades, searching for a
social-democratic programme appropriate
to the new century and the challenges
posed by European integration
and globalisation. In the specific context
of Turkey, the Republican People’s
Party is also a party that is proud of its
republican and nationalist foundations,
which it now has to adapt to the realities
of an age where the sharing of sovereignty
at both regional and global
levels has become a requirement for
effective public policies. An important
part of the political debate also revolves
around the exact definition of
secularism, which has been a pillar
of the Turkish State and which has
allowed a degree of progress and modernisation
that has not been seen in
countries with no separation between
«religion and the State». Left-wing politics
in Turkey has and continues to be
the standard bearer of secularism.
There are more than a dozen other political
parties that are active in the
country, including the important centre-
right True Path party and a party
with a strong regional base in the Eastern
part of the country that has support
among citizens of Kurdish origin.
A remarkable development in Turkey’s
political evolution of over the last eighteen
months has been the strong bipartisan
support in Parliament for a whole
series of laws and reforms that have
been designed to satisfy the Copenhagen
criteria and accelerate Turkey’s integration
process into Europe. Most of
these laws have been passed with the unanimous support of the Parliament,
and with regard to the country’s legal
framework, Turkey now satisfies these
criteria. What will be of critical importance
for 2004 is to see these new laws
and reforms fully implemented through
the required implementation decrees
and regulations. On the economic front,
the programme adopted in the spring
of 2001 after a terrible crisis of confidence
has so far been fruitful. Inflation
has decreased to levels unprecedented
in the past twenty years; debt sustainability
worries have largely disappeared
and growth has averaged nearly
six percent over the last eighteen months.
The year of 2004 will be one of momentous
decisions and events for Turkey
and its quest for full membership in
the European Union that began many
decades ago. Recent political developments
in Turkey as well as a better understanding
of the issues and opportunities
implicated throughout Europe
have strengthened its prospects for an
acceleration of the process that can
lead them to full membership.
1999 Elections
2002 Elections
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