“This
is a bullet fired at
democracy,” snapped
Recep Tayyıp Erdoğan,
Turkey’s prime
minister and chairman
of the country’s
ruling party, in reaction
to the May 1 ruling
by the Constitutional
Court. The court had
validated a maneuver
by the opposition party
in Parliament to block
the nomination of Erdoğan’s
foreign minister, Abdullah
Gül, to accede
to the presidency of
the Turkish Republic.
To deny the ruling
party the quorum it
needed to make Gül
president, the opposition
deputies simply stayed
home. The pro-government
parliamentarians voted
on the candidate anyway,
but the Constitutional
Court agreed with the
opposition’s
contention that the
balloting was illegal
-- and thus null and
void. After Parliament
tried and failed again
to elect Gül president
on May 6, he withdrew
his candidacy. Full
Story>>
|