Turkiye’s contentious election war is about to end

The heated presidential campaign between Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his secular opponent, who has exploited concerns about immigrants and Kurdish militants, entered its closing stages on Friday.

As per reports of both parties, “They have admitted that they cannot clear the 50 percent threshold to achieve success in elections.”

The Turkiye presidential elections are going to enter a run-off level as no candidate won 50% of votes in the first round.

In Sunday’s runoff, it seemed that Erdogan continued two decades of his Islamic style of rule until 2028.

The victory of Rajab Tayyab Erdogan would protect the base of NATO members’ position as a wall that ends the enmities between Moscow and Washington while keeping its way continue in the Middle East.

In the first round on 14 May, the opponent leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu showed a clear-cut substitute for Tayyab Erdogan.

Additionally, a thorough campaign led by former civil employees promising to strengthen ties with allies in the West as well as traditional remedies Erdogan disapproved of were made to address Turkiye’s economic challenges.

Kilicdaroglu formed a six-party alliance that categorized some of Turkiye’s most incompatible powers and gained the huge support of Kurds.