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Democratic Left Party Demokratik Sol Parti | |
|---|---|
| Abbreviation | DSP |
| Leader | Önder Aksakal [tr] |
| Founders | Rahşan Ecevit |
| Founded | 14 November 1985 |
| Headquarters | Mareşal Fevzi Çakmak Cad.17, Beşevler - Ankara, Turkey |
| Membership(2025) | |
| Ideology | Ecevitism Kemalism[2] Social democracy[2] Left-wing nationalism[3] |
| Political position | Centre-left |
| International affiliation | Socialist International Progressive Alliance |
| Colors | Light blue, White and Red |
| Grand National Assembly | 1 / 600 |
| District municipalities | 1 / 922 |
| Belde Municipalities | 1 / 388 |
| Municipal Assemblies | 28 / 20,952 |
| Website | |
| https://www.dsp.org.tr/ | |
TheDemocratic Left Party (Turkish:Demokratik Sol Parti,DSP) is a Turkishpolitical party, founded on 14 November 1985 byRahşan Ecevit.
The DSP, a social-democratic oriented party, was registered on 14 November 1985 byRahşan Ecevit, wife ofBülent Ecevit, as he was banned from political life after the1980 coup d'état.[4]
In 1986, Bülent Ecevit addressed the DSP convention inAnkara, declaring his support for the party. The address landed him in court for allegedly violating the political bans. The DSP was unable, however, to achieve a substantial showing in the1986 Turkish parliamentary by-elections even though Ecevit, despite his ban, continued to campaign at the party's rallies as a "guest speaker".[4]
The political ban on Ecevit was lifted following a referendum in1987.[4] Later that year, Rahşan Ecevit handed over the rule of the party to her spouse. But the party failed to pass the 10% national threshold needed for a political party to have a seat inParliament in the 1987 elections, prompting the Ecevits to step down from their positions in the party.
In 1988, Necdet Karababa was elected as the new party leader. However, the next year, Ecevit was reelected as party chairman in the party convention. Two years later in 1991, the DSP received 10.75% of the votes in the elections allowing the party to have seven seats in the Parliament. This also meant the return of Ecevit to the Parliament after 11 years.
It was a minor party until it won 76 parliamentary seats in the December 1995 elections. Again in 1995, the party started to suffer from inner conflicts after years of serenity. The inner conflicts in the party ended with the dismissal of Erdal Kesebir, MP for Edirne and three other DSP members.
In 1997, the DSP became a partner ofa three-way coalition government led byMesut Yılmaz who at the time was the leader of theMotherland Party (Turkish: Anavatan Partisi). Ecevit became the deputy prime minister.
In 1998, the 55th government of Turkey was toppled by acensure motion. Ecevit received the mandate to form a new government. He foundeda minority government of DSP in 1999 to carry the country to general elections.
Boosted by the capture of the leader of the PKK,Abdullah Öcalan, during his premiership, Ecevit and the DSP won 22,19% of the votes in theelections of April 1999 and took 136 of the 550 seats in the Turkish Parliament becoming the leading party ina coalition with ANAP and MHP.[5] Its leader Bülent Ecevit became thePrime Minister of Turkey for the fifth time.
This government passed many important laws, including banking reform,unemployment insurance, a law to ensure the autonomy of theCentral Bank, qualified industrial zones, tender law, employment incentive law, to name a few. The government also changed 34 articles of the Constitution to widen fundamental rights and freedoms, and did this with the approval of all the parties in parliament. Turkey became a candidate country to theEuropean Union (without any political preconditions and with equal treatment as all other candidate countries). Three major EU harmonisation packages were passed during this government, including the most comprehensive package of 3 August 2002, which included the removal of thedeath penalty and many changes in fundamental rights and freedoms. An economic crisis which resulted from long overdue problems from previous governments caused a drop in the currency in February 2001. But two months later, the government passed a series of very comprehensive economic reforms which included changes to the tender law, economic social council law, unemployment insurance, the restructuring of state banks, accreditation law, law on capital markets, and a law on industrial zones which enabled the high growth of 2002–2007.[6]
The party staunchly opposed theinvasion of Iraq by the US. Ecevit himself was a vocal critic of the invasion, arguing that it would destabilize the region and cause harm to innocent civilians.[7] Ecevit said he favors lifting some economic sanctions against Iraq, the first such statement by a Turkish leader since the sanctions were imposed followingIraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990.[8]
The DSP was weakened by internal divisions in 2001, when Deputy Prime MinisterHüsamettin Özkan and several other leading DSP politicians and MPs founded theNew Turkey Party. The year after, its government coalition partner MHP called for early elections, which were heldon 3 November 2002. None of the three coalition parties were able to pass the 10% national threshold in those elections.
Before the 6th Party Congress on 25 July 2004, Bülent Ecevit announced that he would step down as party leader and leave active politics. During the congress,Zeki Sezer, deputy chairman since 2001, was elected as the new chairman of the party.
DSP entered the2007 elections together with theRepublican People's Party (Turkish: Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, CHP). The DSP-CHP alliance won 20.85% of the votes, with the DSP getting 13 seats in Parliament.
In 2008, together with many other politicians joining the DSP before the local elections of 2009,Mustafa Sarıgül, the Mayor of theIstanbul district ofŞişli officially joined the party.[9]
DSP got only 2.75% of votes in the local elections of 2009. Zeki Sezer resigned and Masum Türker succeeded him. After Türker's succession, both Mustafa Sarıgül, the deputy of Şişli, andRahşan Ecevit, the widow ofBülent Ecevit, resigned from the party and created short livedDemocratic Left People's Party.[10] Democratic Left People's Party dissolved itself after six months. After 2011 general elections, DSP received a major decline in Turkish politics, getting less than 0.25% votes in subsequent elections in 2011 and 2015. In 2015, Önder Aksakal succeeded Türker as party leader.[11] The party lost eligibility to contest in 2018 elections, and they supportedNation Alliance.[12]
In February 2023,Muharrem İnce, the leader of theHomeland Party announced that his party was discussing anelectoral alliance with the Democratic Left Party, theVictory Party,True Party and theJustice Party for the2023 Turkish general election.[13] On 8 March 2023, the party announced that it would not support the candidacy of CHP'sKemal Kılıçdaroğlu for the2023 Turkish presidential election.[14] Furthermore, on 9 March 2023, a pro-Erdoğan journalist,Mahmut Övür claimed that DSP would join thePeople's Alliance.[15][16]
On 7 April 2023, DSP decided to support Erdoğan in the 2023 presidential elections and run under the AKP lists in the parliamentary elections.[17] The decision to support Erdoğan caused 74 former DSP ministers and deputies to split from DSP and support Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu.[18]
Rahşan Ecevit and Bülent Ecevit werehonorary presidents of DSP.
Notable members and former members include:
The termDemokratik Sol (Democratic Left) was created by Bülent Ecevit in his late CHP period with theleft of center movement, as a mix ofsocial democracy,social liberalism,democratic socialism,secularism andKemalism. With this term, the party established a link between universal values of the left and national-cultural heritage which makes the ideology "domestic". In other words, contemporary social democracy is made compatible with the conditions of Turkey. With Democratic Left, Ecevit made up a new synthesis by articulating new dimensions such as democratic socialism and social democracy to the national independence movement or Kemalism. The symbol of the white dove (Ak Güvercin) was selected to symbolize thepacifism and social accordance.
Under Ecevit, DSP approved of the Turkish adhesion to theEuropean Union, although it criticized the content of theEuropean Union Customs Union.[19] During the premiership of Ecevit in 1999, Turkey became a candidate for the EU.[20] However, under its current leader Önder Aksakal, it has started to take a more critical approach towards the EU.[21]
DSP is against the idea of a unitedCyprus state.
| Election | Share | Seats | Leader |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1986[A] | 8.5% | 0 / 11 | Rahşan Ecevit |
| 1987 | 8.53% | 0 / 450 | Bülent Ecevit |
| 1991 | 10.8% | 7 / 450 | |
| 1995 | 14.64% | 76 / 550 | |
| 1999 | 22.19% | 136 / 550 | |
| 2002 | 1.22% | 0 / 550 | |
| 2007 | 20.85%[B] | 13 / 550 | Zeki Sezer |
| 2011 | 0.25% | 0 / 550 | Masum Türker |
| 2015 Jun | 0.19% | ||
| 2015 Nov | 0.07% | ||
| 2018 | Not eligible to contest | ||
| 2023 | 0.61%[C] | 1 / 600 | Önder Aksakal |
^ A: By-elections
^ B: DSP formed an alliance withCHP in 2007 and the alliance got 20.85% of total vote.
^ C: DSP ran in the 2023 parliamentary election onAKP's list and won 1 seat
| Election | Share | Municipalities | Leader |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1989 | 9.09% | 37 municipalities | Bülent Ecevit |
| 1994 | 8.93% | 23 municipalities | |
| 1999 | 19.28% | 189 municipalities | |
| 2004 | 2.18% | 32 municipalities | |
| 2009 | 2.75% | 12 municipalities | Zeki Sezer |
| 2014 | 0.33% | 5 municipalities | Masum Türker |
| 2019 | 0.98% | 3 municipalities | Önder Aksakal |