For other uses of CHP, see .
The
Republican People's Party (Turkish:
Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi or
CHP) is the oldest Turkish political party, which established the Republican regime and the parliament in Turkey. The party's logo is six white arrows on a red background.
On domestic policy, the party is generally regarded as being
social-democratic (though rooted in the
corporatism of the early Republic). Today, CHP is considered
state nationalistic and
secular/
laicist; it is also a member of the
Socialist International[1]. The party's logo consists of the
Six Arrows, which represent the foundational principles of
Kemalist Ideology:
republicanism,
nationalism,
statism,
populism,
secularism, and
revolutionism. These principles were formulated and propounded by
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the first leader of the
Republic of Turkey. (It should be noted that these principles did not have the same meaning in the 1920s and 1930s in Turkey that they do in contemporary English.)
History
Party associates itself with
Mustafa Kemal and his friendships that he build during the
World War I, especially the
Gallipoli Campaign, in which the leader Mustafa Kemal (Atatürk) was an Ottoman military officer. CHP played a significant role during
Establishment of Turkish national movement. CHP also claims that
Turkish War of Independence is also its history, as the Congress of Sivas was accepted as the first general congress of the Republican People's Party. CHP perceives Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as the party chairman as the Representative Committee (Temsil Heyeti) was CHP.
CHP and Single-Party Period
Republican People's Party is accepted to be established on 9 September 1923. After the effective
Turkish War of Independence, the first cabinet of the Republic of Turkey was formed on October 30 by Ismet Inönü, the closest ally of
Mustafa Kemal. On 10 November 1924, People's Party was renamed as the Republican People's Party (CHP). This is the beginning of the
Single-Party Period of Republic of Turkey, which CHP politics was the main politics.
CHP and Multiparty Period
The day after Atatürk's death, Ismet Inönü was elected the second president and assumed the leadership of the Republican People's Party (CHP). On the general nationwide congress of CHP on 26 December 1938, Ismet Inönü was elected as the "everlasting CHP leader" after Atatürk era. The delegates donated Atatürk the title "eternal chief", and to Inönü the title "national chief".
İnönü Period
During 1940s, CHP established
Village Institutes, which were an enlightenment project developed in order to lift the huge gap between the urban and rural areas . Various scientists, writers, teachers, and doctors graduated from Village Institutes; and supported Turkey's modernization efforts.
At the
elections of 1946, CHP gained 396 seats and ranked as the first party. However, to protect their seats before the 1946 elections, CHP had introduced and passed the antidemocratic electoral legislation bringing the winner-take-all system. In this system, if a party got the most votes in a province, it would have captured all seats of that province. However at the
elections of 1950, Republican People's Party was hit by its own electoral system, DP gained 408 with 53.3% vote. This was followed by the defeat on 3 September 1950 municipal elections, in which
Democratic Party (DP) gained 560 municipalities, and CHP only 40 municipalities.
Real multiparty democracy, parlement, started with CHP transferring power to DP in a peaceful manner, without a revolution or a coup. From that time on, Republican People's Party formed the official opposition.
On 26 November 1951, in the ninth Congress of CHP, youth branch and women branch of CHP were formed. On 22 June 1953 establishment of labor unions and vocational chambers was proposed, and the right to strike for workers was introduced in the party program.
On 2 May 1954, CHP again lost the elections to DP, gaining only 31 seats with 35.4% of the total vote. DP captured 505 seats with 57.6% vote, due to the winner-take-all system. However, from that time on, CHP started increasing its votes, CHP intensified its opposition tactics, increasing its vote share to 41%, gaining 178 seats, in the 27 October 1957 elections. DP gained 424 seats with 47.9% vote.
Since Democratic Party could not stand the opposition of CHP; DP threatened to close CHP, and confiscated all belongings of CHP, including the heritage of Atatürk. In addition, Democratic Party also oppressed other opposition parties; suppressing the media, and violating democracy.
In addition to the authoritarian government, Democratic Party also suffered from corruption and increasing inflation, caused by the devaluation and external debt. In the single-party CHP government, CHP developed the railway system; but DP insisted on the highways and motorways, which increased the petroleum demand of the young Turkish Republic, creating great economic crises.
Eventually on 27 May 1960; the Turkish army, supported by the media, university professors and the opposition, seized the power and overthrew the Democratic Party government.
In the
military coup of 1960, National Unity Committee was formed by the upper-class soldiers. National Unity Committee closed Democratic Party and started trials to punish Democratic Party leaders for their dictator regime. As a result, on 16/17 September 1961, Prime Minister
Adnan Menderes, Foreign Minister Fatin Rüstü Zorlu, and Finance Minister
Hasan Polatkan were hanged in Imrali island prison. President
Celal Bayar was forgiven due to his old age, but sentenced to life imprisonment.
In 1961,
Justice Party (AP) was established, claiming to be the successor to the Democratic Party. In the meantime, National Unity Committee established an interim House of Representatives instead of the TBMM, in order to prepare a new constitution for Turkey. In the new constitution, Constitutional Court was to be established, to prevent the government from violating the constitution (just as in the example of DP).
1961 constitution is accepted to be the most liberal and democratic constitution of Turkey. Also, the winner-take-all electoral system was immediately abolished, and proportional representation system was introduced. New constitution brought Turkey a bicameral parliament, composed of the Senate of the Republic as the upper chamber, and National Assembly as the lower chamber. National Unity Committee chairman General Cemal Gürsel was elected as the fourth president of Turkey.
On 15 October 1961, CHP won the elections, gaining 173 seats with the 36.7% of the vote. AP gained 158 seats, with 34.8% of the vote, below the last vote of DP. CHP leader Ismet Inönü formed the coalition with Justice Party (AP) as the prime minister. This was the first coalition government in Turkey's history. Inönü established two coalition governments until the 1965 elections.
Süleyman Demirel became prime minister in the late 1960's, and because he was the leader of the AP (Justice Party), he continued in the tradition of Adnan Menderes gaining a large amount of support from both the religious and democrats.
Ecevit Period
In 1971, the CHP-backed army brought down the AP government of
Süleyman Demirel, and, in 1973, following some interim governments, the CHP was restored to power under
Bülent Ecevit. Bülent Ecevit the CHP began to take on a distinct left wing role in politics and although remaining staunchly nationalist tried to implement socialism into the ideology of CHP.
In 1975, the CHP was again defeated by the Justice Party, where Demirel became prime minister again. From 1977 to 1979, the CHP was back in power with Ecevit (mostly in coalition with smaller parties including oddly enough the
Islamist MSP party of
Necmettin Erbakan later to be leader of the Refah Party), but in 1980, the AP returned with Demirel. The political switching between the CHP and the AP came to an end when the military performed a coup and banned all political parties.
Recovery Period
After the 1980 military coup, the name of "Republican People's Party" and the abbreviation CHP was banned from use by the military regime. After the 1987 referendum and a legislation (in 1993) allowing the reestablishment of older parties, CHP was reestablished.
In 1991, since Turkey's election system had two large election thresholds (10 % nationwide and 15 % local thresholds) and since center-left is divided into two parties (SHP and DSP), social democrats and democratic left groups had little power in the parliament. Between 1991 and 1995, Turkey was ruled by the coalition of center-right DYP and center-left SHP (= Social Democratic Populist Party)(later SHP joined CHP).
Until 1998, Turkey was ruled by the center right
Motherland Party (ANAP) and the
True Path Party (DYP), unofficial successors of the Democrat Party. In 1995, the
Islamic Welfare Party (Refah Party) step into Parliament, and the CHP seemed to have been deserted by the Turkish people, having only 10 % nationwide support and only 49 deputies of 550. It now seemed as if the CHP had been replaced as the main left-wing party.
But the Welfare Party was banned in 1998, and during the 1990s the
Democratic Left Party (DSP), led by former CHP leader Bülent Ecevit, gained popular support. (Democratic Left Party is established by Ecevit family in 1985.) In 1998, after the resignation of RP-DYP coalition following the "February 28" post-modern and soft military coup, center-right ANAP formed a coalition government with center-left DSP and the small center-right party DTP (Democratic Turkey Party), along with the support of CHP.
However, due to big scandals, corruption and some illegal actions of this coalition, CHP withdrew its support from the coalition and helped overthrow the government with the vote of "no confidence". Just before the elections of 1999, DSP formed an interim minority government with the support of DYP and ANAP; and the terrorist PKK leader
Abdullah Öcalan is captured in Kenya under the Ecevit rule.
Therefore in the elections of 1999, all nationalist and left votes have switched to DSP and CHP failed to pass the 10 % threshold (8.7 % vote), winning no seats in Parliament - and things didn't look good for it after the creation of the moderate Islamic conservative
Justice and Development Party in 2001.
The political coalitions which ruled
Turkey from the center right ANAP and DYP to the center left DSP were increasingly making the country unstable. The
Islamists returned with a new party the Fazilet (which was also later banned) while MHP the far right nationalist party had began to take advantage of the disillusionment felt by former supporters of the Refah Party and the ever bickering ANAP and DYP.
Finally a coalition was formed (generally assumed under the force of hand of the army) between DSP-ANAP-MHP it was doomed to fail and a seemingly unimportant argument between Bülent Ecevit and
Ahmet Necdet Sezer the president sent the Turkish stock markets into freefall, a political crisis followed causing the collapse of the coalition and elections to be held. (Actually the economic crisis was a result of the endless corruptions for which ANAP, DYP, DSP, RP, and MHP are responsible, therefore the Sezer-Ecevit argument only lighted the fire.)
Baykal Period
After Baykal resigned in 1999, Altan Öymen became the leader. But 2 years later, Baykal became the leader of the party again.
In the 2002 Parliamentary elections, the CHP won 178 seats in Parliament, and only it and the AKP (Justice and Development Party) went to Parliament. The CHP became the main opposition party again and Turkey's second largest party. It had begun the long road to recovery.
It must be understood however, that this had very little to do with voters supporting CHP. Many were former DSP supporters who were angry at the economic crisis that many blamed on the Ecevit government. Also many DSP and ANAP supporters left these parties for AK party as did many MHP and Fazilet (now Saadet party) members.
Many on the left are still very critical of the leadership of CHP especially
Deniz Baykal, who they complain is stifling the party of young blood thus turning away the young who turn either to apathy or even to vote for AKP. While AKP boast of a young leadership who have lived through many of the difficulties of many in
Turkey CHP are seen as an 'old guard' that do not represent modern
Turkey. The leftists also are very critical of the party's continuous opposition to the removal of
Article 301 of Turkish penal code; which caused people to be prosecuted for "insulting Turkishness" including Nobel Winner author
Orhan Pamuk, Elif Şafak, and the conviction of Turkish-Armenian journalist
Hrant Dink, its attitude towards the minorities in Turkey, as well as its Cyprus policy.
Despite this recovery, since the dramatic General Election of
2002, the CHP has been racked by internal power struggles, and has been outclassed by the AKP government of Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. In the local elections of
2004, its overall share of the vote held, largely through mopping up anti-Erdoğan votes among former supporters of smaller left-wing and secular right-wing parties, but was badly beaten by the AKP across the country, losing former strongholds such as
Antalya.
Much of the blame was put on the leader of CHP Deniz Baykal. After the local elections CHP was racked by defections of several key members of the party all claiming a lack of democratic structure within the party and the increasingly-authoritarian way in which Deniz Baykal runs the party. Even those who support Deniz Baykal would admit that the party would be much more successful with a different leader.
In October 2004,
New Turkey Party (Yeni Türkiye Partisi, YTP) merged into the CHP. Lately Baykal is bidding for fusing the DSP and CHP together under one roof, namely CHP, under his leadership.
On
June 28 2007, the Ethics Committee of the Socialist International decided to call for a report on "how the CHP acted when it comes to support for democracy," starting a process that might result in eventual expulsion of the CHP. CHP has received much criticism from Socialist International members, who say its "nationalist rhetoric" is in violation of universal democratic standards.
[1] "The CHP overstepped the tolerance limits of the Socialist International long ago; for this reason it should be expelled from the family of social democrat parties." told Morgan Johansson, a prominent
Swedish social democrat.
[2] On
July 19 2007, a group of Turkish
left-wing intellectuals and human rights activists issued a petition urging the Socialist International in favour of CHP's expulsion, asserting that "CHP had lost its social-democratic identity and turned into a right-wing nationalist party defending the
status quo".
[3]
At the
2007 general election CHP ran in alliance with
Democratic Left Party. CHP suffered a heavy defeat, getting 7,300,234 votes (20.85% of the total). CHP, YTP, and DSP combined got 21.77% of the votes back in
2002. The party could become first only in three provinces in
Thrace (
Edirne, Tekirdağ, Kırklareli) and two provinces on the
Aegean coast (İzmir, Muğla). With these results, 112 candidates (13 of these MPs are DSP affiliates) were elected to the
Grand National Assembly of Turkey from the CHP electoral sheet compared to 178 in 2002.
See also
References
External links
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Mustafa Bülent Ecevit (b. May 28, 1925 in Istanbul– d. November 5, 2006 in Ankara) was a Turkish politician, poet, writer and journalist.
Personal life
Born in Ankara, Ecevit's father was Ahmet Fahri Ecevit who was born in Kastamonu and was a professor of forensic
..... Click the link for more information. The September 12, 1980 Turkish coup d'état, headed by General Kenan Evren, Chief of the General Staff, was the third coup d'etat in the history of the Republic after the 1960 coup and the 1971 "Coup by Memorandum".
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Deniz Baykal (born July 20 1938 in Antalya, Turkey) is a Turkish politician and long-time leader of the Republican People's Party (CHP). At the moment, he is the main opposition leader of the Turkish parliament.
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Hikmet Çetin (born 1937 in Diyarbakır, Turkey) is a Turkish politician, former minister of foreign affairs and was leader of the Republican People's Party for a short time. He served also as the Speaker of the Turkish Grand National Assembly.
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Deniz Baykal (born July 20 1938 in Antalya, Turkey) is a Turkish politician and long-time leader of the Republican People's Party (CHP). At the moment, he is the main opposition leader of the Turkish parliament.
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Altan Öymen (1932 Trabzon, Turkey) is a Turkish journalist, author and former politician.
He graduated from the School of Political Science of Ankara University. He began his journalist career already in 1950 at age of 18, and worked as reporter, columnist and
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Deniz Baykal (born July 20 1938 in Antalya, Turkey) is a Turkish politician and long-time leader of the Republican People's Party (CHP). At the moment, he is the main opposition leader of the Turkish parliament.
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Party of European Socialists
Sozialdemokratische Partei Europas
Parti socialiste européen
Partito Socialista Europeo
Partido socialista europeo
President Poul Nyrup Rasmussen MEP
Founded 1992
Headquarters
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Type Unicameral
Speaker Köksal Toptan
Members 550
Political groups Justice and Development Party
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Economic systems
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