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Ali Bayramoglu: How Voters See the Political Landscape in Türkiye: Who Is Ahead and Why?

ali bayramoglu

Recent polling suggests a subtle but meaningful shift in Türkiye’s political balance. While the gap between the ruling AKP and the opposition CHP remains narrow, momentum appears to have tilted back toward President Erdogan—driven largely by geopolitical developments and perceptions of leadership in times of crisis.


A Reliable Snapshot: What the Data Says

In a political environment flooded with rapid developments, consistent and credible polling has become essential. Among research firms, PANAROMA TR stands out for its perceived methodological consistency and reliability.

Its March survey offers a valuable snapshot of how Turkish voters are interpreting a complex mix of domestic tensions and global بحران.


A System Under Pressure: Key Political Inputs

Türkiye’s political climate is currently shaped by overlapping internal and external pressures.

External factors:

  • The expanding war involving the US, Israel, and Iran
  • Rising instability across the Middle East
  • Uncertainty over how far the conflict may escalate

These developments are not only geopolitical—they are feeding directly into domestic political perceptions.


Domestic dynamics:

Several entrenched trends continue to shape voter sentiment:

  • Legal cases involving Istanbul Municipality and Ekrem Imamoglu, alongside arrests of opposition figures and journalists
  • The government’s persistent and largely unchanged authoritarian posture
  • The opposition’s strategy of focusing heavily on judicial and democratic issues
  • The government leveraging foreign policy and national security narratives to dominate political discourse

At the same time:

  • The Kurdish peace process continues, but with noticeable slowdown at critical stages
  • The DEM Party remains caught between supporting the process and criticizing delays

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Public Opinion: A Divided but Balanced Electorate

According to the PANAROMA TR March survey:

  • A majority of the public blames the US and Israel for the conflict with Iran
  • More than 60% believe the government is managing security threats effectively
  • Over half the population continues to support the Kurdish peace process

At the same time:

  • The dominant view on the Imamoglu case is that it is politically motivated
  • Many voters believe the goal is to block his political rise rather than address corruption

The Central Paradox in Turkish Politics

The data reveals what can be described as a dual perception of the government:

On one side:

  • Authoritarian pressure on opposition
  • Use of legal mechanisms for political ends

On the other:

  • Strong performance in foreign policy
  • Perceived competence in national security

👉 This paradox is the core determinant of voter behavior today

Turkey Election Survey: CHP Leading by Over 4 Points in March


Political Alignment: A Polarized Balance

The electorate remains sharply divided:

  • Around 70% of voters are split between AKP and CHP
  • The margin between the two remains very narrow and stable

Other parties play secondary roles:

  • MHP continues as a junior partner in government
  • DEM Party remains focused on the Kurdish issue
  • Nationalist opposition parties (IYI, Zafer, others) represent roughly 10% of the vote, fragmented and issue-specific

A Shift in Momentum: AKP Regains the Lead

For months, CHP had been leading AKP by a small margin of 1–1.5 points.

However, the March data shows:

👉 AKP has now moved slightly ahead, with the gap unchanged

This suggests not a dramatic shift—but a reversal in direction.


Erdogan’s Image: A Key Driver

One of the most striking findings:

  • The share of voters who see Erdogan as unsuccessful has dropped below 50% for the first time in a long period
  • Those who see him as successful have risen to 45%
  • The gap has narrowed to just 4 points

This improvement is widely attributed to:

👉 Geopolitical developments and crisis leadership perception


What It Means for Voting Behavior

The key question is whether this shift in perception will translate into votes.

There are strong reasons to think it might:

  • Voters tend to prioritize security and stability during crises
  • Foreign policy performance is currently outweighing domestic criticism
  • The opposition’s single-issue focus may be reaching its limits

Bottom Line

Türkiye’s political balance remains finely poised, but the direction of momentum has changed.

  • The opposition’s democracy-centered narrative has plateaued
  • The government’s emphasis on stability, leadership, and foreign policy strength is gaining traction

👉 In a polarized system where margins are razor-thin, even small perception shifts can determine who leads.

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