After
three consecutive defeats against ruling Justice and Development Party in 2002,
2007 and 2011, Turkey's first political party Republican People's Party is
having difficult days while fluctuating between Kemalism and social democracy.
Republican People's Party was
established in 1923 by modern Turkey's founder and charismatic leader of
Turkish Independence War (1919-1922) Mustafa Kemal Atatürk as a political body
which would implement country's modernization reforms not only in politics and
economics, but also in terms of culture and law. RPP's reforms aiming to create
a pro-Western and secular state from a pious and uneducated Muslim society
became mostly successful in terms of rising the legitimacy of the Republic
instead of Sultanate and Caliphate based monarchy, but three important problems
could not be solved by the single-party government; civil-military relations,
the Kurdish question and secularism-Islamism debates. After transition to
multi-party democracy, RPP tried to position itself as a center-left social
democratic party but did not give up from its modernistic characteristics
coming from Kemalism. The party also could not be successful in coming to power
and solving these three main problems that Turkey has been facing with.
Problematic nature of civil-military
relations in Turkey and the guardianship role of Turkish Armed Forces led to
two grand coups (27 May 1960 and 12 September 1980), a memorandum (12 March
1971) and many extraordinary events such as 28 February 1997 process in Turkish
political history. Civil-military relations seem to get normalized in recent
years although there are fears of rovanchism and revenge due to harsh legal
practices over Turkish generals and soldiers who are accused of implementing or
engineering a coup against the civilian governments. Kurdish question on the
other hand was broke out violently after the 12 September 1980 coup and PKK
terrorism caused the death of more than 30.000 Turkish citizens. Kurdish
question still seems unsolved although the Turkish state made many important
legal and cultural reforms and openings in this field especially in the last
decade. The third problem Islamism-secularism debates still constitutes the
main fault line in Turkish politics and it has always been a very fertile
ground for populist Islamist leaders throughtout the Republican history.
Republican People's Party's most important weakness seems to be this problem
since the party is often wrongfully considered as a political establishment
aiming to spread out atheism by pious segments of the society.
Although Republican People's Party's
main ideological source is always Kemalism, the modernization paradigm of
Turkish Republic, the party showed some successes in its history in reforming
its ideology and renewing itself. In the late 1950s, the party renewed itself
with modern liberal ideas and projects and became the primary actor in the
preparation of the progressive 1961 constitution. In the 1970s, the party
successfully transformed itself into a social democratic populist party under
the charismatic leadership of Bülent Ecevit. The party developed many concrete
projects and policy suggestions although these efforts never turned into
accomplishments due to violent nature of Turkish politics in the 1970s and
RPP's eternal problem of coming to power. During1980s and 1990s, RPP gave up
from its socialist-leaning economic obsessions of the 1970s and became a social
democratic-liberal party mainly focusing on the protection of secular and
democratic nature of the Republic and Turkey's integration with the Western
world. However, the party's problem in reaching out the conservative segments
as well as Kurds continued and RPP's voting spectrum changed between % 15-25 of
Turkish society, mostly consisted of better educated middle-class people
attaching themselves to Kemalism more than social democracy.
Republican People's Party in recent
years is again on the verge of an ideological change but the party base and organization
do not seem very willingly to give up from Kemalism due to rising fears of
authoritarian Islamism under JDP rule. Moreover, unlike 1970s the party
leadership does not seem charismatic enough to convince its voters and members
for an ideological revision. Thus, RPP hesitates between Kemalism and social
democracy and is often perceived by Turkish people as a party struggling in its
own problems instead of giving hope. The party obviously is in need of a
synthesis of Kemalism and social democracy and a strong leadership that could
manage this process. This could be done only if the party could open its doors
to young and unstained educated people coming from the society and abolish its
elitist but at the same time strangely middle-class image by coming into
contact with all segments of the society including business circles, workers
syndicates, religious groups etc.
Dr.
Ozan Örmeci
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