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Justice Party (Turkey)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former political party in Turkey
Not to be confused withJustice Party (Turkey, 2015).

Justice Party
Adalet Partisi
ChairmanRagıp Gümüşpala
(1961-1964)
Süleyman Demirel
(1964-1981)
General SecretaryNuri Kemal Bayar
FounderRagıp Gümüşpala
Founded11 February 1961 (1961-02-11)
Dissolved18 August 1981 (1981-08-18)
Preceded byDemocrat Party
Succeeded byTrue Path Party
Motherland Party
Great Turkey Party
HeadquartersAnkara, Turkey
IdeologyTurkish nationalism
Liberal conservatism
Right-wing populism[1][2]
Faction:
Social liberalism[3][4][5]
Political positionCentre-right
Colours
  •   Red (official)
  •   Purple (customary)

TheJustice Party (Turkish:Adalet Partisi,AP) was a Turkishpolitical party prominent in the 1960s and 1970s. A descendant of theDemocrat Party, the AP was dominated bySüleyman Demirel, who served six times asprime minister, and was in office at the time of themilitary coup on 12 September 1980. Along with all other political parties inTurkey, the Justice Party was suppressed in the immediate aftermath of the coup. It was subsequently re-established as theTrue Path Party in 1983.

The Justice Party was aTurkish nationalist andliberal conservative party. It advocatedKemalist principles, parliamentary democracy and a market economy. It strongly supported membership inNATO and close relations with theUnited States.

History

[edit]

Establishment

[edit]

With the1960 coup d'état, Turkey's generals disbanded the formerly dominantDemocrat Party. They could not, however, entirely dismantle the vastgrassroots organization that this party had left behind. Democrat Party officials were based in many of the squatter neighborhoods in Turkey's larger cities, and would quickly incorporate newly arrivedAnatolian migrants into the party's fold.[6] A number of parties soon emerged to reclaim this newly partyless Democrat voting bloc. The Justice Party was one of these neo-Democratic parties, first established by retired generalRagıp Gümüşpala in 1961.[7] It immediately adopted the galloping horse logo of the Democrat Party.

The Justice Party quickly proved the most successful in consolidating the existing Democrat Party provincial organizations, particularly in the western regions of the country. TheNew Turkey Party, however, was initially more successful in eastern Turkey.[8] In the1961 elections, the two post-Democrat parties combined to win a very impressive 48.5% of the vote, 34.8% of which went to the Justice Party alone.[9] The ruling generals, however, would not allow for a neo-Democrat government to replace the old order they had brought down. Instead they askedİsmet İnönü, whoseRepublican People's Party was the largest party with 36.7% of the vote, to form a coalition government.

Rise

[edit]

İnönü's various coalitions would form the government until 1964, but in the meantime the Justice Party continued to grow, steadily gaining votes at the expense of the smaller post-Democrat parties.[10] The Republican People's Party eventual turn towardsleft of centre would also help to give the military a somewhat more favorable view of the Justice Party.[11] In this political climate, the 1963 nationwide local elections gained increased importance, and eventually came to be seen as a political referendum on the newly established parties.[12] The Justice Party ultimately emerged as a triumphant winner, winning around 46% of the vote and establishing itself as the most popular party in the country.[13]

With its popular appeal well established, the Justice Party turned to issues of leadership. Gümüşpala died in 1964, and questions soon emerged over who would succeed him as the party's leader.[14]Sadettin Bilgiç, a doctor by training, had become acting party president following Gümüşpala's death, and initially emerged as the favorite for the position. But the Turkish press tarnished Bilgiç's reputation, accusing him of political and religious conservatism.[15] Party leaders soon started to worry that he would ruin the party's image with the Turkish intelligentsia and, more importantly, the army. Indeed, the military head of state,Cemal Gürsel, began pushing for a more progressive candidate to take charge - Süleyman Demirel.

Demirel came from a modest village background, and climbed up the social latter by the way of his education. He had studied in theUnited States as anEisenhower fellow and then worked in a US multinational construction company.[16] He appealed to the party's base of newly urbanized rural migrants, who could identify with his modest beginnings and status as aself-made man.[17] At the Justice Party's national convention in December 1964, Demirel ultimately defeated Bilgiç for the party's general-president post.[18]

Once firmly in charge, Demirel began his assault on İnönü's fragile coalition, making sure it failed to win a vote of confidence in early 1965. Parliamentary bickering finally led to the triumphant 1965 elections, in which the Justice Party received nearly 53% of the vote and promptly formed a majority government with 240 seats.[19] The party had achieved this result by appealing to small-holder peasants emerging from poverty, small commercial and industrial groups as well as the newly rich farmers; it performed most strongly in the relatively rich western provinces of Turkey, along theAegean coast and inThrace. This Justice Party victory was simultaneously a historical loss for the Republican People's Party, which suffered the worst defeat in its political history so far by winning only 134 seats and 29% of the vote.[20]

Decline

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The Justice Party's good fortune, however, did not last for long. The small Anatolian enterprises that had formed a key part of the party's constituency couldn't compete with the Istanbul area's large, modern corporations. These entrepreneurs felt betrayed, and defected from the Justice Party to smaller rightist alternatives.[21] Meanwhile, the country suffered through increasing socio-political strife, as conflicts between leftist and rightist groups turned increasingly violent. Since Demirel symbolized a pro-Western capitalist current in the Turkish establishment, he became an easy target for both the far left and the religious right.[22] The party was still able to win the 1969 elections, carrying 256 seats with around 46.5% of the vote, but the overall situation grew increasingly chaotic. The near-constant street violence escalated, threatening the Turkish economy and ultimately provoking the military to intervene once again in 1971.[23] With the power once again firmly in its hands, the military forced Demirel to resign.

The Justice Party was not able to win the elections held in 1973 and 1977, but Demirel was able to serve as prime minister three more times between 1975 and 1980, albeit with coalition partners. On 12 September 1980, the military once again staged acoup d'état, and this time banned Demirel and the Justice Party from the country's politics. After an extended pause, the party eventually reemerged as theTrue Path Party, complete with the galloping horse logo, in 1983.[citation needed]

Grand National Assembly of Turkey
ElectionVotesSeatsStatus
#%Rank#±
19613,527,43534.82nd
158 / 450
newAP-CHP Coalition (1961-1962)
Opposition (1962-1965)
19654,921,23552.91st
240 / 450
Increase 82Government
19694,229,71246.51st
256 / 450
Increase 16Government
19733,197,89729.82nd
149 / 450
Decrease 107Opposition (1973-1975)
AP-MSP-MHP-CGP Coalition (1975-1977)
19775,468,20236.92nd
189 / 450
Increase 40AP-MSP-MHP Coalition (1977-1978)
Opposition (1978-1979)
Minority Government (1979-1980)

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^SÜLEYMAN DEMİREL'İN ARDINDAN
  2. ^Türkiye popülizmin babasını kaybetti
  3. ^https://acikerisim.tbmm.gov.tr/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11543/598/197600306.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y[bare URL]
  4. ^https://acikerisim.tbmm.gov.tr/items/2714475f-2d26-4e51-be1c-198a37189532[bare URL]
  5. ^https://acikerisim.tbmm.gov.tr/items/43bbca65-27e1-4004-b4f2-8a422c616917[bare URL]
  6. ^Sherwood, 57
  7. ^Ahmad, 128
  8. ^Sherwood, 60
  9. ^Ahmad, 127
  10. ^Sherwood, 60
  11. ^Dodd, 21
  12. ^Sherwood, 60
  13. ^Ahmad, 127
  14. ^Ahmad, 128
  15. ^Sherwood, 61
  16. ^Ahmad, 131
  17. ^Ahmad, 128
  18. ^Sherwood, 61
  19. ^Ahmad, 127
  20. ^Sherwood, 55
  21. ^Ahmad, 133
  22. ^Ahmad, 131
  23. ^Ahmad, 142

Sources

[edit]
Democrat Party
(1946–1960)
Justice Party
(1961–1981)
True Path Party
(1983–2007)
True Path Party (2007)
2007–present
Democrat Party
(2007–present)
Parties represented in theGrand National Assembly
Minor parties (without representation above local level)
International
National
Other
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