Publication
10 Sep 2007
The effort of Turkey’s ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) to elect one of its own to be president of the Republic provoked a crisis. The nominee, the otherwise respected Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, has roots in Turkey’s Islamist movement and his wife wears a head scarf, which some secularists consider a symbol of both Islamism and backwardness. Moreover, because AKP already controls the prime ministry and parliament, it was argued that the balance of political power would be disturbed if the party also assumed the presidency.
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English (PDF, 23 pages, 150 KB) |
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Author | Carol Migdalovitz |
Series | US Congressional Research Service Reports |
Publisher | Congressional Research Service (CRS) |