Turkey’s Erdogan faces challenge in Istanbul poll
ISTANBUL — Voters in Istanbul returned to the polls Sunday for a re-run mayoral election ordered up by authorities after President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his political allies lost control of Turkey’s largest city for the first time in 25 years.
In Turkey’s March 31 local vote, Istanbul mayoral opposition candidate Ekrem Imamoglu narrowly beat the ruling party’s candidate, dealing a blow to Erdogan’s powerful Islamist-rooted party. Imamoglu served as mayor for nearly three weeks before Turkey’s electoral board threw out the results and ordered a rerun as requested by the government, on the grounds that some officials overseeing the vote were not civil servants as required by law.
The decision has raised questions about Turkey’s democratic process and whether Erdogan’s ruling party, in power since 2002, would be willing to accept an electoral defeat. Erdogan launched his career as Istanbul’s mayor in 1994.
The city of 15 million residents draws millions of tourists each year and is Turkey’s commercial and cultural hub. Straddling Europe and Asia, Istanbul accounted for 31% of Turkey’s GDP in 2017, and the city government and its subsidiaries had a total budget of $8.8 billion last year.