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Test of Erdogan’s staying power as Turks begin voting in local elections

A voter casts his ballot at a polling station during local elections in Hakkari, Turkey.

A voter casts his ballot at a polling station during local elections in Hakkari, Turkey. Photo: Getty

Turks have begun voting in local elections that President Tayyip Erdogan has described as a matter of survival for the country.

Mr Erdogan, who has dominated Turkish politics for more than 16 years thanks to strong economic growth and supreme campaigning skills, has become the country’s most popular, yet also most divisive, leader in modern history.

However, he could be dealt an electoral blow with polls indicating his ruling AK Party (AKP) may lose control of the capital Ankara, and even Istanbul, the country’s largest city.

Voters in provinces in eastern Turkey began voting at 7am local time while voting in the rest of Turkey begins at 8am.

Polling stations close at 4pm in the east and 5pm in the west.

Just over 57 million people are eligible to vote.

A clear picture of the winners will probably emerge around midnight.

The ruling party of resident Tayyip Erdogan could lose control of Ankara. Photo: Getty

With the economy contracting following a currency crisis last year in which the lira lost more than 30 per cent of its value, some voters appeared ready to punish Mr Erdogan who has ruled with an increasingly uncompromising stance.

This week, as authorities again scrambled to shore up the lira, Mr Erdogan cast the country’s economic woes as resulting from attacks by the West, saying Turkey would overcome its troubles following Sunday’s vote and adding he was “the boss” of the economy.

“The aim behind the increasing attacks towards our country ahead of the elections is to block the road of the big, strong Turkey,” Mr Erdogan told one of his six rallies in Istanbul on Saturday.

Sunday’s elections, in which Turks will vote for mayors and other local officials across the country, will be the first since Mr Erdogan assumed sweeping presidential powers last year and will be a reckoning for his government, which has come under fire for its economic policies and record on human rights.

Defeat in either Ankara or Istanbul would bring to an end a nearly quarter century rule by Mr Erdogan’s AKP or its predecessors in those cities and deal a symbolic blow to Turkey’s leader.

Before the vote, the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) and Iyi (Good) Party formed an electoral alliance to rival that of the AKP and its nationalist MHP partners.

The pro-Kurdish opposition Peoples Democratic Party (HDP), which Erdogan has accused of links to Kurdish militants, has not made an official alliance and is not fielding candidates for mayor in Istanbul or Ankara, which is likely to benefit the CHP.

The HDP denies links to the outlawed militant Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK).

-AAP

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