Ahmed Davutoglu , new Turkish Prime Minister after the Election( Photo: Associated Press)
Ahmed Davutoglu , new Turkish Prime Minister after the Election( Photo: Associated Press)

ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Four parties will dominate Turkey’s 550-seat parliament following Sunday’s elections. Here is a sketch of each political force. Conservative and Islamic. Has governed Turkey since 2002. Founded the previous year by Recep Tayyip Erdogan, long an increasingly autocratic prime minister and now, since 2014, Turkey’s president.Erdogan has maintained de-facto control of the party and government despite becoming the ceremonial head of state, but is tainted by scandals involving lavish expenditure, including on a 1,150- room presidential palace.Won 258 seats with 41 percent of votes, down 69 seats and 9 points.

Used Police Force

Turkey’s Prime Minister and leader of ruling Justice and Development Party Ahmet Davutoglu, accompanied by his wife Sare Davutoglu( see picture), waves to supporters from the balcony of his party in Ankara, Turkey, late Sunday, June 7, 2015. In a stunning rebuke of  President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s ambitions to expand his powers, Turkish voters stripped his party of its simple majority in parliament, preliminary election results showed Sunday. With 99.9 percent of the vote counted, Erdogan’s ruling Justice and Development Party, the AKP, had the support of around 41 percent of voters, state-run TRT television said. His Party has lost liberal support and EU membership momentum as Erdogan used police to suppress protests, curbed free speech, sought controls on Internet communications, Islamized schools.

Republican Peoples Party

Center-left and staunchly secular. The party founded modern Turkey in 1923 under its first leader, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.Its commitment to keep Muslim influences out of government has cost it votes. In hopes of broadening support its current leader, Kemal Kilicdaroglu, 66, has purged the most pro-secular voices and dropped opposition to the public wearing of Muslim headscarves.Campaigned on promises to strengthen Turkey’s economy, raise wages and end poverty.Won 132 seats with 25 percent support, down three seats and 1 point.

Nationalist Movement Party

Former economics professor Devlet Bahceli, 67, has led party since 1997 and served as deputy premier from 1999 to 2002.Past generations of party supporters were ultranationalists involved in 1970s riots that triggered a 1980 military coup. Bahceli purged members linked to violence.Shares much ideologically with Erdogan but bitterly disagrees with his flexible approach to peace talks with Kurdish  militants. Still viewed as the most likely coalition partner in the next government.Won 80 seats with 16 percent of votes, up 27 seats and 3 points.

Peoples Democratic Party

New force in parliament and the primary voice for Turkey’s 20 percent Kurdish minority. Left wing, with strong support from women and gays. Charismatic leader Selahattin Demirtas, 42, has built party appeal across ethnic lines. Party campaigns to boost rights of women and minority groups. It seeks equality for all religions in the majority Sunni Muslim country. Wants mandatory religion classes in schools abolished.  Won 80 seats with 13 percent of votes, double its support when members ran as independents in 2011, reports Associated Press.

Turkish Election Official in one of the Election Rooms( Photo: Associated Press)
Turkish Election Official in one of the Election Rooms in Ankara( Photo Associated Press)

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