Yesterday Recep Tayyip Erdogan was sworn in as Turkey’s president. Does that name sound familiar? Erdogan, who has been Prime Minister for the last 12 years, won the country’s first popular presidential election by 52% and is now looking to cement his power as modern Turkey’s most powerful leader. I traveled to Istanbul earlier this month and talked with people there about what exactly Erdogan represents to them in 21st century-Turkey.
Erdogan’s track record was positive during his first few terms, but secular Turks are now increasingly disenchanted with their new president. He rose to popularity as a champion of reform and westernization. Under his 3 terms as prime minister, the Turkish economy grew – 5% since 2002 – and the army was brought under civilian control. Turkey even made a run at joining the European Union in 2005.
But then something changed. Last summer, amidst Erdogan’s consolidation of military power, he began to display increasingly autocratic behavior. We remember the protests in Taksim Square last year and the outcries over Prime Minister Erdogan’s attempts to limit access to social media.
Erdogan now wants to expand presidential power in a position intended to be purely ceremonial. But that would require a constitutional amendment… Not a good sign to many Turks. One man I talked with called Erdogan a “dictator.” Another expressed disgust at the decision to hold the presidential elections in the middle of August, when a large portion of Turkey’s educated and wealthy population (translation: those who would be likely to vote against Erdogan) would be vacationing and unable to cast a vote.
Turkey has long stood as a model for “western-style democracy with a Muslim population.” However, all of the Turkish people I chatted with made a clear distinction between today’s secular Turkey – one that wishes for a more seamless integration with the West – and the rising conservative, Muslim middle class in regions like Anatolia. And it worries many that Erdogan has begun to shore up his support from these Muslim communities. One tour guide told me that an increasing number of conservative Muslims are visiting Istanbul on vacation. These days, one will see just as many women in burqas walking around Istanbul’s tourist hotspots as women in bathing suits and cutoffs. Many Turks wonder if the Turkey established in 1923 by Ataturk, the country’s visionary founder, is slipping from their fingers. Is it no longer possible to keep the separation between church & state?









