Iraq News Now

Former Turkish PM Davutoglu sharply criticizes Erdogan's AKP

Former Turkish PM Davutoglu sharply criticizes Erdogans AKP
Former Turkish PM Davutoglu sharply criticizes Erdogan's AKP

2019-04-22 00:00:00 - Source: Baghdad Post

A former prime minister and close ally of President Recep Tayyip

Erdogan strongly criticized the ruling AK Party on Monday, blaming policy

changes and an alliance with nationalists for its poor performance in Turkey’s

local elections last month, Reuters reported.

In his first major public challenge to Erdogan since leaving

office three years ago, Ahmet Davutoglu, an AKP member, slammed the party’s

economic policies, media restrictions and the damage he said it had done to the

separation of powers and to Turkey’s institutions.

Davutoglu, a high profile figure in the party, served as

prime minister between 2014 and 2016 before falling out with Erdogan, who has

ruled Turkey with his AKP for 16 years.

In a serious blow to Erdogan, the AKP lost control of the

capital Ankara and Turkey’s largest city Istanbul in the March 31 elections.

The AKP and its Islamist predecessors had governed the two cities for 25 years.

“The election results show that alliance politics have

caused harm to our party, both in terms of voter levels and the party’s

identity,” Davutoglu said in a 15-page statement.

The AKP and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) formed an

alliance before presidential and parliamentary elections in June last year in

which Erdogan won the executive presidency but saw the level of support for his

party fall.

“SCARING GLOBAL INVESTORS”

There were no signs of a lira reaction to Davutoglu’s

statement. The currency had weakened in early trade and stood at 5.8350 against

the dollar, from a close of 5.8170 on Friday.

Davutoglu said the party’s reformist, liberal ethos had been

replaced in recent years by a more statist, security-based approach that was

driven by concerns about preserving the status quo.

He also said recent economic policy decisions showed a move

away from free market principles and that “scaring global investors necessary

to the development of the country is a dead-end”.

The Turkish economy slipped into recession in the last

quarter of 2018 after a currency crisis which has wiped 35 percent off the

value of the lira since the start of last year.

“The main reason for the economic crisis is an

administration crisis. Trust in the administration vanishes if economic policy

decisions are far from reality,” Davutoglu said.

He also warned against cronyism in public administration and

said that recruitment should be transparent and based on competence and

qualifications, not on personal connections.

In recent years there has been repeated media speculation

that prominent AKP politicians might break away to establish a new political

party, but that has not happened and Davutoglu made no mention of such a

prospect.

Instead, he stressed the need for reform within: “I call on

our party’s executives and relevant bodies to assess all these subjects and our

future vision sensibly and with cool heads.”





Sponsored Links