1995 Turkish general election
General elections were held in Turkey on Sunday 24 December 1995, triggered by the newly re-established Republican People's Party's (CHP) withdrawal from a coalition government with the True Path Party (DYP). The coalition had been in government for four years, having been formed by the Social Democratic Populist Party, the CHP's predecessor.
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550 seats in the Grand National Assembly 276 seats needed for a majority | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 85.20% (![]() | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The elections inaugurated a 550-member parliament, its largest membership. The religious Welfare Party (RP) had the largest membership but not a majority standing in the body. The Democratic Left Party (DSP) also made significant gains at the expense of the CHP, which barely crossed the election barrier. The election was also the first time an openly Kurdish party – the People's Democracy Party – contested. It was the leading party in several provinces, but received no MPs due to missing the 10% electoral threshold.
Results
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Party | Votes | % | Seats | +/– | |
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Welfare Party | 6,012,450 | 21.38 | 158 | +96 | |
Motherland Party | 5,527,288 | 19.65 | 132 | +17 | |
True Path Party | 5,396,009 | 19.18 | 135 | –43 | |
Democratic Left Party | 4,118,025 | 14.64 | 76 | +69 | |
Republican People's Party | 3,011,076 | 10.71 | 49 | New | |
Nationalist Movement Party | 2,301,343 | 8.18 | 0 | New | |
People's Democracy Party | 1,171,623 | 4.17 | 0 | New | |
New Democracy Movement | 133,889 | 0.48 | 0 | New | |
Nation Party | 127,630 | 0.45 | 0 | New | |
Rebirth Party | 95,484 | 0.34 | 0 | New | |
Workers' Party | 61,428 | 0.22 | 0 | New | |
New Party | 36,853 | 0.13 | 0 | New | |
Independents | 133,895 | 0.48 | 0 | 0 | |
Total | 28,126,993 | 100.00 | 550 | +100 | |
Valid votes | 28,126,993 | 96.65 | |||
Invalid/blank votes | 974,476 | 3.35 | |||
Total votes | 29,101,469 | 100.00 | |||
Registered voters/turnout | 34,155,981 | 85.20 | |||
Source: Nohlen et al.[1] |
Aftermath
Coalition of Ordered government
Not since before the declaration of the republic had a blatantly religious party emerged as the largest political force in Turkey. There were fears of the secular armed forces refusing to accept the election result, perhaps even launching yet another coup. As a national debate waged, Tansu Çiller's government stayed on, eventually agreeing with Mesut Yılmaz's Motherland Party (ANAP) to form a minority coalition in March 1996, some three months after the election.
The ANAP–DYP coalition was toppled by an RP censure motion in June, forcing President Süleyman Demirel to choose between calling a fresh election or asking RP leader Necmettin Erbakan to form a government. He chose the latter, and the DYP switched allegiances to form Turkey's first Islamist government with the RP in June 1996.
CHP decline
The newly reformed CHP had withdrawn as junior partner of a four-year coalition with the DYP to contest an election on an agenda that boasted its Kemalist and centre-left history. The gamble turned out to be a disaster; far from returning to government, the CHP became the smallest party in parliament with a loss of nationalist votes to the MHP and left-wing votes to the DSP. The party's unpopularity led to its complete ejection from parliament in the next elections in 1999.
References
- Dieter Nohlen, Florian Grotz & Christof Hartmann (2001) Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume I, pp258–273 ISBN 0-19-924958-X