Turkey Vote in Favor of More Authoritarianism Was Not Free or Fair, Natch
Country has been in a state of emergency since last June, while President Erdogan likened European leaders to Nazis.

Voters in Turkey narrowly approved a constitutional referendum that will transform Turkey's parliamentary system into a presidential system—the victory for President Recep Erdogan solidifies a slide into authoritarianism he began more than a decade ago, an authoritarian slide which itself enabled the victory in the first place.
The set of reforms in the referendum legalize "the de facto executive presidency that Recep Tayyip Erdogan is already exercising," Wolfango Piccoli, co-president of Teneo Intelligence, explained in a pre-election briefing shared with Reason. "In addition, it will grant him a vast number of additional powers that currently belong to other state institutions, without introducing the necessary checks and balances required to safeguard against a further authoritarian turn."
The Turkish government is unlikely to try to begin normalizing its domestic policy despite the victory because of the slim margin. Piccoli explained such a margin furthers the risk of the repression. "Similarly, long promised and overdue structural economic reforms will most likely fail to materialize over the next 12 months as the harmonization of laws and institutions with the new executive presidency will take priority."
"A pervading climate of fear and siege mentality are now deeply instilled in Turkish society and mounting concerns about vote rigging could deepen polarization and grievances," Piccoli said.
Indeed, election monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe complained of an "unlevel playing field" and last minute voting rules changes.
"Voters were not provided with impartial information about key aspects of the reform, and civil society organizations were not able to participate," the OSCE said in its statement. "Under the state of emergency put in place after the July 2016 failed coup attempt, fundamental freedoms essential to a genuinely democratic process were curtailed."
For his part, Erdogan told opponents to give it up and stop "tiring themselves out" by challenging the referendum results (they did)—the Yes vote received 51.4 percent of the vote, and was pushed to victory in part by Turks voting abroad. According to state media, 63.1 percent of Turkish voters in Germany supported the referendum.
Erdogan had resorted in the past month to comparing European leaders in Germany and elsewhere to Nazis for refusing to approve Turkish government-sponsored rallies in favor of the referendum in their countries. Turkey and Germany are both NATO members, although the constitutional results will likely halt whatever's left of Turkey's process of joining the European Union.
Erdogan himself has suggested holding a referendum on whether Turkey should continue the 50-plus year process that came to a virtual stand-still shortly after accession talks officially began in 2005 when France and Austria promised to put Turkey's membership bid to a referendum vote themselves. EU officials have been warning the lack of political reforms in Turkey could cause talks to end in a "train crash" as early as 2007.
Erdogan also said President Trump called to congratulate him on his victory.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"Similarly, long promised and overdue structural economic reforms will most likely fail to materialize over the next 12 months as the harmonization of laws and institutions with the new executive presidency will take priority."
I'm glad the United States isn't in that situation.
Authoritarians are such fucking pussies. Always looking for a daddy to suck up to. It's fucking pathetic. They make me sick.
What amazes me is how all dictators, from ancient kings to clear nutjobs like Pol Pot, the Nork family, Hitler, Stalin, Mao, all of them, recognize they need a fig leaf to appear legitimate. Has there ever been even a single dictator who simply did what he wanted? Maybe Pharoahs? Any who, instead of simply telling underlings what to do, actually write up decrees in faux-legal language, sometimes even retaining a rubber stamp legislature?
Pharoahs had the priests
Good catch. I had forgotten that ancient rulers were part of the theocracy.
Some have tried, but they rarely lasted long. Most of those smart enough to actually grab power realize that they need at least some semblance of legitimacy. Kings and emperors called it "divine right". Communist and Fascist strongmen both like to talk about the "will of the people". In either case, though, those who held onto power for very long were those tacitly recognized limits to their power, however absolute they might claim it to be. Kings needed the support of their noblemen; monarchs who chopped off too many of the wrong heads tended to get the chop themselves. Or else monarchs gathered the support of the common people by casting themselves as the protector of the commoners against the abuses of the nobles. Dictators who seize power by coup de main are usually careful to play their subordinates off against each other, so that no single follower can grow strong enough to challenge them.
Here is a rough translation of the actual referendum:
Should the Constitution be amended to require Turkish remakes of all Hollywood blockbusters, but especially any Star Wars movies, to build a new national oil wrestling stadium, and also that other thing Erdogan mentioned?
I don't know why it should stop them from joining the EU; it's the entirely predictable end result of the demands that the EU made on Turkey in the late 1990s.
Besides, it should be good practice in joining the EU, where some bland bureaucrat stationed in Brussels can tell you what to do anyway,
one time i stood up to the sun as a little man in shitty diapers
and a table fell on my head because the earthen spirits are so
fucking molecular and shit...
and my little head bled out red rivers and i decided to
paddled down a river of my cut little head and then
a hole so mysterious arose and my little man brain
purchased a dream ticket into this fuck all adults
version of reality and the bottom dropped and I
ate pussy for months and ate wars on bowls of salads
prepared by strange creatures not made by this planet
and slides into the dense neon were constructed
on the dead crushed skeletons of a thousand
poets whirring the screams of odd dimensional shifts?
one time my look took a look
left of a nook
and that nook looked
one time at a nook
where dragons flapping fucking
wings rested in a kaintucky
ultra green valley while agile
sat smoking sum sweet shit
with his gentle svelte lord
Rand Paul the delirious
magician of socrates
agile never met Rand Paul
but my raft always
spread the soft concrete
of the Washington dreams
of star dome spent lines
where breads and kneeling
bums get warm behind
weeds and cast-off fuck you
blankets and letters stamped
with old singers crooning
behind cemetery deaths
my fingers bend
on a porch where
an old queen dies
Islam has to Islamize the government. Even in a country that was determined to keep it separate by its founder.
So let's invite more here. Worked so well for Europe.
No vote that isn't unanimous and attended by all voters is *fair*.
Look at Austin Texas - through out Uber because 51% of 15% of the voters said so. Democracy makes slaves of us all.
Turkey Vote in Favor of More Authoritarianism Was Not Free or Fair, NATURALLY.
This isn't fucking Buzzfeed. Use proper English. Do not appreviate stupid words.
If I ever see the words "slay" or "clap back" in a headline at Reason I am immediately cancelling my subscription.