Founded in 2001 by members of a number of parties such asFP,MHP,ANAP andDYP, the party has a strong base of support among people from theright-wing tradition of Turkey.[34] The party positioned itself as pro-liberal market economy, supportingTurkish membership in the European Union.[35] Orange is the party's main colour. Other colours include white for the logo, blue for the flag, and orange-white-blue-red for the corporate design.[36]
Controversies over whether the party remains committed tosecular principles enshrined in theTurkish constitution have dominated Turkish politics since 2002. Turkey's constitution established the country as a secular state and prohibits any political parties that promoteIslamism orshariah law.
Since coming to power, the party has brought about tighter regulations onabortion and higher taxes onalcohol consumption, leading to allegations that it is covertly undermining Turkish secularism. Some activists, commentators, opponents and government officials have accused the party of Islamism. The Justice and Development Party has faced two "closure cases" (attempts to officially ban the party, usually for Islamist practices) in 2002 and 2008.
Just 10 days before thenational elections of 2002, Turkey's chief prosecutor, Sabih Kanadoğlu, asked theTurkish constitutional court to close the Justice and Development Party, which was leading in the polls at that time. The chief prosecutor charged the Justice and Development Party with abusing the law and justice. He based his case on the fact that the party's leader had been banned from political life for reading an Islamist poem, and thus the party had no standing in elections. TheEuropean Commission had previously criticized Turkey for banning the party's leader from participating in elections.[58]
The party again faced aclosure trial in 2008 brought about by the lifting of a long-standing university ban on headscarves.[59] At an international press conference in Spain, Erdoğan answered a question of a journalist by saying, "What if the headscarf is a symbol? Even if it were a political symbol, does that give [one the] right to ban it? Could you bring prohibitions to symbols?" These statements led to a joint proposal of the Justice and Development Party and the far-rightNationalist Movement Party for changing the constitution and the law to lift a ban on women wearing headscarves at state universities.[60]
Soon afterwards, Turkey's chief prosecutor,Abdurrahman Yalçınkaya, asked theConstitutional Court of Turkey to close down the party on charges of violating theseparation of religion and state in Turkey.[60] The closure request failed by only one vote, as only six of the 11 judges ruled in favor, with seven required; however, 10 out of 11 judges agreed that the Justice and Development Party had become "a center for anti-secular activities", leading to a loss of 50% of the state funding for the party.[61]
Parts of this article (those related to 2023 and 2024 elections) need to beupdated. The reason given is: The 2023 and 2024 elections have concluded. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(March 2024)
The party has won pluralities in the seven most recent legislative elections, those of2002,2007,2011,June 2015,November 2015,2018 and2023. The party held a majority of seats for 13 years, but lost it in June 2015, only to regain it in the snap election of November 2015 but then lose it again in 2018. Its past electoral success has been mirrored in the three local elections held since the party's establishment, coming first in2004,2009 and2014 respectively. However, the party lost most of Turkey's biggest cities includingIstanbul andAnkara in2019 local elections, which has been attributed to theTurkish economic crisis, accusations of authoritarianism, as well as alleged government inaction on theSyrian refugee crisis.[62][63]
The AK Party won a sweeping victory in the2002 elections, which saw every party previously represented in the Grand National Assembly ejected from the chamber. In the process, it won a two-thirds majority of seats, becoming the first Turkish party in 11 years to win an outright majority. Erdoğan, as the leader of the biggest party in parliament, would have been normally given the task to form a cabinet.
However, according to the Turkish Constitution Article 109 the prime ministers had to be also a representative of the Turkish Parliament. Erdoğan, who was banned from holding any political office after a 1994 incident in which he read a poem deemed pro-Islamist by judges, was therefore not. As a result, Gül became prime minister.
It survived the crisis over the2003 invasion of Iraq despite a massive back bench rebellion where over a hundred AK Party MPs joined those of the oppositionRepublican People's Party (CHP) in parliament to prevent the government from allowing theUnited States to launch a Northern offensive in Iraq from Turkish territory. Later, Erdoğan's ban was lifted with the help of the CHP and Erdoğan became prime minister by being elected to the parliament after aby-election in Siirt.
The AK Party has undertaken structural reforms, and during its rule Turkey has seen rapid growth and an end to its three decade long period of high inflation rates. Inflation had fallen to 8.8% by 2004.
Influential business publications such asThe Economist consider the AK Party's government the most successful in Turkey in decades.[64]
In the local elections of 2004, the AK Party won 42% of the votes, making inroads against the secularRepublican People's Party (CHP) on the South and West Coasts, and against theSocial Democratic People's Party, which is supported by someKurds in the South-East of Turkey.
Voter base by monthly household income. AK Party is the largest party in group 1, 2, 3 and 4, while CHP is the largest in group 5, the richest 20% of Turkey.
On 14 April 2007, an estimated 300,000 people marched inAnkara to protest the possible candidacy of Erdoğan in the2007 presidential election, afraid that if elected as president, he would alter the secular nature of the Turkish state.[65] Erdoğan announced on 24 April 2007 that the party had decided to nominate Abdullah Gül as the AK Party candidate in the presidential election.[66] The protests continued over the next several weeks, with over one million reported at an 29 April rally in Istanbul,[67][68] tens of thousands reported at separate protests on 4 May inManisa andÇanakkale,[69] and one million inİzmir on 13 May.[70]
Earlyparliamentary elections were called after the failure of the parties in parliament to agree on the next Turkish president. The opposition parties boycotted the parliamentary vote and deadlocked the election process. At the same time, Erdoğan claimed the failure to elect a president was a failure of the Turkish political system and proposed to modify the constitution.
The AK Party achieved a significant victory in the rescheduled 22 July 2007 elections with 46.6% of the vote, translating into control of 341 of the 550 available parliamentary seats. Although the AK Party received significantly more votes in 2007 than in 2002, the number of parliamentary seats they controlled decreased due to the rules of theTurkish electoral system. However, they retained a comfortable ruling majority.[35]
Nationally, the elections of 2007 saw a major advance for the AK Party, with the party outpolling the pro-KurdishDemocratic Society Party in traditional Kurdish strongholds such asVan andMardin, as well as outpolling the secular-left CHP in traditionally secular areas such asAntalya andArtvin. Overall, the AK Party secured a plurality of votes in 68 of Turkey's 81 provinces, with its strongest vote of 71% coming fromBingöl. Its weakest vote, a mere 12%, came fromTunceli, the only Turkish province where theAlevi form a majority.[71] Abdullah Gül was elected as the President in late August with 339 votes in the third round – the first at which asimple majority is required – after deadlock in the first two rounds, in which a two-thirds majority was needed.
A rally of the Justice and Development Party in 2007
After the opposition parties deadlocked the 2007 presidential election by boycotting the parliament, the ruling AK Party proposed a constitutional reform package. The reform package was first vetoed byPresident Sezer. Then he applied to theTurkish constitutional court about the reform package, because the president is unable to veto amendments for the second time. The court did not find any problems in the package and 69% of the voters supported the constitutional changes.
The reforms consisted of:
electing the president by popular vote instead of by parliament;
reducing the presidential term from seven years to five;
allowing the president to stand for re-election for a second term;
holding general elections every four years instead of five;
reducing the quorum of lawmakers needed for parliamentary decisions from 367 to 184.
The2009 Turkish local elections took place in March 2009, during theGreat Recession. After the success of the AK Party in the 2007 general elections, the party saw a decline in the2009 Turkish local elections. In these elections the AK Party received 39% of the vote, 3% less than in the local elections of 2004. Still, the AK Party remained the dominating party in Turkey. The second party CHP received 23% of the vote and the third partyMHP received 16% of the vote. The AK Party won in Turkey's largest cities:Ankara andIstanbul.[72]
Reforming the Constitution was one of the main pledges of the AK Party during the 2007 election campaign. The main opposition party CHP was not interested in altering the Constitution on a big scale, making it impossible to form aConstitutional Commission (Anayasa Uzlaşma Komisyonu).[73] The amendments lacked the two-thirds majority needed to instantly become law, but secured 336 votes in the 550 seat parliament – enough to put the proposals to a referendum.
The reform package included a number of issues: such as the right of individuals to appeal to the highest court, the creation of theombudsman's office, the possibility to negotiate a nationwide labour contract, positive exceptions for female citizens, the ability of civilian courts to convict members of the military, the right of civil servants to go on strike, a privacy law, and the structure of the Constitutional Court. The referendum was agreed by a majority of 58%.
In thepresidential election of 2014, the AK Party's long time leader Recep Tayyip Erdoğan was elected president. In the party'sfirst extraordinary congress, former foreign ministerAhmet Davutoğlu was unanimously elected unopposed as party leader and took over as prime minister on 28 August 2014. Davutoğlu stepped down as prime minister on 4 May 2016 following policy disagreements with President Erdoğan. Presidential aide Cemil Ertem said to Turkish TV that the country and its economy would stabilize further "when a prime minister more closely aligned with President Erdoğan takes office".[74]
In thegeneral election held on 7 June, the AK Party gained 40.87% of the vote and 258 seats in theGrand National Assembly of Turkey (Turkish: Türkiye Büyük Millet Meclisi, TBMM). Though it still remains the biggest party in Turkey, the AK Party lost its status as the majority party and the power to form a single-party government. Until then it had held this majority without interruption for 13 years since it had come to power in 2002. In this election, the AK Party was pushing to gain 330 seats in the Grand National Assembly so that it could put a series of constitutional changes to a referendum, one of them was to switch Turkey from the current parliamentary government to an American-style executive presidency government.
This pursuit met with a series of oppositions and criticism from the opposition parties and their supporters, fearing the measure would give more unchecked power to the current President of TurkeyRecep Tayyip Erdoğan, who has drawn fierce criticisms both from home and abroad for his active role in the election, abandoning the traditional presidential role of maintaining a more neutral and impartial position in elections by his predecessors in the office. The result of the Kurdish issues-centeredPeoples' Democratic Party, HDP, breaking through the 10% threshold to achieve 13.12% out of the total votes cast and gaining 80 seats in the Grand National Assembly in the election, which caused the AK Party to lose its parliamentary majority.
In the2019 local elections, the ruling party AK Party lost control of Istanbul and Ankara for the first time in 15 years, as well as five of Turkey's six largest cities. The loss has been widely attributed to AK Party's mismanagement of theTurkish economic crisis, rising authoritarianism as well as alleged government inaction on theSyrian refugee crisis.[62][63] Soon after the elections, the Turkish government ordered are-election in Istanbul. The decision led to a downfall on AK Party's popularity and it lost the elections again in June with an even greater margin.[75][76][77][78]
The result was seen as a huge blow to Erdoğan, who had once said that if his party 'lost Istanbul, we would lose Turkey.'[79] The opposition's landslide was characterized as the 'beginning of the end' for Erdoğan,[80][81][82] with international commentators calling the re-run a huge government miscalculation that can lead to a potential İmamoğlu candidacy in the next scheduledpresidential election.[80][82] It is suspected that the scale of the government's defeat could provoke a cabinet reshuffle and early general elections, currently scheduled for June 2023.[83][84]
Although the party is described as an Islamist party in some media, party officials reject those claims.[86] According to former ministerHüseyin Çelik, "In theWestern press, when the AK Party administration – the ruling party of the Turkish Republic – is being named, most of the time 'Islamic', 'Islamist', 'mildly Islamist', 'Islamic-oriented,' 'Islamic-based' or 'with an Islamic agenda', and similar language is being used. These characterizations do not reflect the truth, and they sadden us". Çelik added, "The AK Party is a conservative democratic party. The AK Party's conservatism is limited to moral and social issues".[87] Also in a separate speech made in 2005, Prime MinisterRecep Tayyip Erdoğan stated, "We are not an Islamic party, and we also refuse labels such as Muslim-democrat." Erdogan went on to say that the AK Party's agenda is limited to "conservative democracy".[88]
On the other hand, according to at least one observer (Mustafa Akyol), under the AK Party government ofRecep Tayyip Erdoğan, starting in 2007, "hundreds of secularist officers and their civilian allies" were jailed, and by 2012 the "old secularist guard" in positions of authority was replaced by members/supporters of the AK Party and theIslamicGülen movement.[89] On 25 April 2016, the Turkish Parliament Speakerİsmail Kahraman told a conference of Islamic scholars and writers in Istanbul that "secularism would not have a place in a new constitution”, as Turkey is “a Muslim country and so we should have a religious constitution". (One of the duties of Parliament Speaker is to pen a new draft constitution for Turkey.)[90] As of 2023, some sources define the party as being "rooted in political Islam" and an "Islamist-rooted party".[91][92]
The party's foreign policy has also been widely described asNeo-Ottomanist,[96] an ideology that promotes renewed Turkish political engagement in the former territories of its predecessor state, theOttoman Empire. However, the party's leadership has also rejected this label.[97] The party's relationship with theMuslim Brotherhood has drawn allegations ofIslamism.[34]
In May 2023, Erdoğan said at a rally in Istanbul, "AK Party and other parties in our alliance would never be pro-LGBT, because family is sacred to us. We will bury those pro-LGBT in the ballot box".[101]
In November 2013, the party left the EPP to join theAlliance of European Conservatives and Reformists (now European Conservatives and Reformists Party) instead.[102] This move was attributed to the AK Party's disappointment not to be granted full membership in the EPP, while it was admitted as a full member of the AECR.[103] It drew criticism in both national and European discourses, as the driving force of Turkey's aspirations to become a member of theEuropean Union decided to join a largelySoft Euroscepticism alliance, abandoning the more influential pro-European EPP, feeding suspicions that AK Party wants to join a watered down, not a closely integrated EU.[104] The AK Party withdrew from AECR in 2018. The AK Party has been seen to besoft Eurosceptic.[107]
From 2002 to 2011 the party passed series of reforms to increase accessibility to healthcare and housing, distribute food subsidies, increased funding for students, improved infrastructure in poorer districts, and improved rights for religious and ethnic minorities. AK Party is also widely accredited for overcoming the2001 Turkish economic crisis by followingInternational Monetary Fund guidelines, as well as successfully weathering the2008 financial crisis. From 2002 to 2011, the Turkish economy grew on average by 7.5 percent annually, thanks to lower inflation and interest rates. The government under AK Party also backed extensiveprivatization programs. In fact, 88% of the privatizations in Turkey were carried out under AK Party rule.[108] The average income in Turkey rose from $2,800 U.S. in 2001 to around $10,000 U.S. in 2011, higher than income in some of the new EU member states. Other reforms included increasing civilian representation over military in areas of national security, education and media, and grant broadcasting and increased culturalrights to Kurds. On Cyprus, AK Party supportedunification of Cyprus, something deeply opposed by theTurkish military. Other AK Party reforms included lifting bans on religious and conservative dress, such asheadscarves, in universities and public institutions. AK Party also ended discrimination against students from religious high schools, who previously had to meet additional criteria in areas of education and upon entry to universities. AK Party is also accredited for bringing the Turkish military under civilian rule, a paradigm shift for a country that had experienced constant military meddling for almost a century.[88]
More recently,nationwide protests broke out against the allegedauthoritarianism of the AK Party in 2013, with the party's perceived heavy-handed response receiving western condemnation and stalling the party's once championed EU accession negotiations.[109] In addition to its alleged attempts to promote Islamism, the party is accused by some of restricting some civil liberties andinternet use in Turkey, having temporarily blocked access toTwitter andYouTube in March 2014.[110] Especially after thegovernment corruption scandal involving several AKP ministers in 2013, the party has been increasingly accused ofcrony capitalism.[111] The AK Party favors a strong centralized leadership, having long advocated for apresidential system of government and significantlyreduced the number of elected local government positions in 2013.[112]
Critics have accused the AK Party of having a 'hidden agenda' despite their public endorsement of secularism and the party maintains informal relations and support for theMuslim Brotherhood.[34] Both the party's domestic and foreign policy has been perceived to bePan-Islamist orNeo-Ottoman, advocating a revival ofOttoman culture often at the expense of secular republican principles,[113] while increasing regional presence in formerOttoman territories.[18][114][115]
The AK Party has been criticized for supporting a wide-scale purge of thousands of academics after the failed coup attempt in 2016. Primary, lower secondary and secondary school students were forced to spend the first day of school after the failed coup d'état watching videos about the ‘triumph of democracy’ over the plotters, and listening to speeches equating the civilian counter-coup that aborted the takeover with historic Ottoman victories going back 1000 years. Campaigns have been organised to release higher education personnel and to drop charges against them for peaceful exercise of academic freedom.[116]
Imprisonment of political activists continues, while the chair ofAmnesty Turkey has been jailed for standing up to the AK Party on trumped up "terrorism charges". These charges have drawn condemnation from many western countries, including from the US State Department, the EU, as well as from international and domestic human rights organisations.[117]
The party has also been criticized by Turkish and internationalLGBT rights groups includingKAOS GL for homophobic statements made by some AK Party politicians and for what they argue has become a repressive climate forLGBT rights in Turkey under the AK Party. In 2002 before his election, Erdoğan said that "homosexuals must be legally protected within the framework of their rights and freedoms."[118][119] In 2011, AK Party Minister for Families and Social PolicyFatma Şahin said the AK Party government would be willing to work with LGBT rights groups to advance laws protecting Turkey's gay community.[120] However, commentators have argued the AK Party has taken an increasingly hardline stance on LGBT issues since coming to power, which has been characterized variously as part of a general trend towards authoritarianism under the AK Party or as motivated by Islamic and militant nationalist sentiments within the party.[121] In 2012, the AK Party voted against a proposal by theBDP to include legalization of same-sex marriage in the redrafted Turkish constitution and in 2013 blocked a research motion in theparliament of Turkey on having a parliamentary debate regarding LGBT rights. During the latter debate, AK Party MP Türkan Dağoğlu stated "Homosexuality is an abnormality. Same-sex marriages may not be allowed. It would cause social deterioration"; this prompted criticism from some opposition politicians.[122] In 2017, Erdogan stated that the principle of LGBT rights was "against the values of our nation" and in 2020 endorsed controversial anti-gay statements made by Muslim scholarAli Erbaş which had received condemnation from some Turkish lawyers and human rights groups.[123] In 2021, AK Party vice chairman and Interior MinisterSuleyman Soylu declared LGBT people to be "perverts." Turkish constitutional law experts Sule Ozsoy Boyunsuz and Serkan Koybasi have described public statements on gay people made by AK Party politicians as both constituting ashate speech and contradicting the principle of Turkey's policy of secularism. Political scientist Mine Eder has argued that Turkey has experienced a backslide on acceptance and government anti-discrimination support for homosexuals under Erdogan.[124][125]
At the heart of the scandal was an alleged "gas for gold" scheme withIran involving Aslan, who had US$4.5 million in cash stored in shoeboxes in his home, and Zarrab, who was involved in about US$9.6 billion of gold trading in 2012. Both men were arrested.[127] The scheme started after Turkish government officials found a loophole in theU.S. sanctions against Iran that allowed them to access Iranian oil and gas. The Turks exported some US$13 billion of gold to Iran directly, or through theUAE, between March 2012 and July 2013. In return, the Turks received Iranian natural gas and oil. The transactions were carried out through the Turkish state-owned bank, Halkbank. In January 2013, theObama administration decided to close this loophole but instead of immediately charging Halkbank, the U.S. government allowed its gold trading activities to continue until July 2013, because Turkey was an important ally regarding theAmerican-led intervention in the Syrian Civil War, and the U.S. had been working on anuclear deal with Iran.[127]
Then-Prime Minister Erdogan (nowPresident of Turkey) was on a tour ofPakistan when the scandal broke, which analysts believe changed the response of the AK Party, or influenced those with the tapes to leak them at a time when Erdoğan was visiting an ally (Pakistan).[128]
^"AK PARTİ" (in all capital letters) is the self-declared abbreviation of the name of the party, as stated in Article 3 of the party charter,[2] while "AKP" is mostly preferred by its opponents; the supporters prefer "AK PARTİ" since the word "ak" in Turkish means "white", "clean", or "unblemished", lending a positive impression.[3] The Chief Public Prosecutor of the Supreme Court of Appeals initially used "AKP", but after an objection from the party,[4] "AKP" was replaced with "Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi" (without abbreviation) in documents.
^abMinority in the legislature. Due to the presidential system, the president does not need a majority to form a government.
^ab"Erdoğan's Triumph".Financial Times. 24 July 2007. Archived fromthe original on 7 March 2021. Retrieved24 July 2017.The AK Party is now a national conservative party — albeit rebalancing power away from the westernised urban elite and towards Turkey's traditional heartland of Anatolia — as well as the Muslim equivalent of Europe's Christian Democrats.
^abAbbas, Tahir (2016).Contemporary Turkey in Conflict. Edinburgh University Press.
^abBayat, Asef (2013).Post-Islamism. Oxford University Press. p. 11.
^abcGunes, Cengiz; Zeydanlioglu, Welat, eds. (2013).The Kurdish Question in Turkey. Routledge. p. 270. Konak, Nahide (2015).Waves of Social Movement Mobilizations in the Twenty-First Century: Challenges to the Neo-Liberal World Order and Democracy. Lexington Books. p. 64. Jones, Jeremy (2007).Negotiating Change: The New Politics of the Middle East. I.B. Tauris. p. 219.
^abYavuz, M. Hakan (1998). "Turkish identity and foreign policy in flux: The rise of Neo-Ottomanism".Critique: Critical Middle Eastern Studies.7 (12):19–41.doi:10.1080/10669929808720119.
^abKardaş, Şaban (2010). "Turkey: Redrawing the Middle East Map or Building Sandcastles?".Middle East Policy.17:115–136.doi:10.1111/j.1475-4967.2010.00430.x.
^abErisen, Cengiz (2016).Political Psychology of Turkish Political Behavior. Routledge. p. 102.
^abMcKeever, Vicky (15 January 2020)."Turkish soccer star Hakan Sukur is now an Uber driver in the US".CNBC. Retrieved6 April 2023.After retiring from soccer Sukur went into politics, winning a seat in Turkey's parliament as a member of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's right-wing Justice and Development Party in 2011.
^Hüseyin, Kalaycı (2024)."The De-Europeanization of the Kurdish Question in Turkey and the EU".Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies.27 (2). Taylor & Francis:242–261.doi:10.1080/19448953.2024.2352328. Retrieved14 April 2025.Tekdemir defines the HDP as a left–leaning populist party and argues that its alternative, radical, plural democratic project is inclusive rather than exclusionary like that of the conservative, far–right AKP. O. Tekdemir, 'Left–wing populism within horizontal and vertical politics: the case of Kurdish–led radical democracy in agonistic pluralism', Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies, 21(3), 2019, pp. 335–349, p. 337.
^abCavatorta, Francesco (29 December 2020).Routledge Handbook on Political Parties in the Middle East and North Africa. Routledge.ISBN978-1-000-29330-2.
^"Justice and Development Party".Encyclopædia Britannica. Britannica.com. Retrieved21 July 2014.Unlike its predecessors, the AK Party didn't centre its image around an Islamic identity; indeed, its leaders underscored that it was not an Islamist party and emphasized that its focus was democratization, not the politicization of religion.
^"AK Party explains charter changes, slams foreign descriptions".Hürriyet Daily News. Istanbul. 28 March 2010. Retrieved21 July 2014.In the Western press, when the AK Party administration, the ruling party of the Turkish Republic, is being named, unfortunately most of the time Islamic agenda,' and similar language is being used. These characterizations do not reflect the truth, and they sadden us," Çelik said. "Yes, the AK Party is a conservative democratic party. The AK Party's conservatism is limited to moral and social issues.