Turkey’s Ruling AK Party To Discharge Former PM Davutoğlu, Associated Figures

Turkey’s ruling Justice and Deve­lopment Party (AK Party)’s cen­tral committee referred on Mon­day former Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, former AK Party law­makers Ayhan Sefer Üstün, Selçuk Özdağ and Abdullah Başçı to the disciplinary committee to be dis­charged from the party.

Former Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu, who resigned from party leaders­hip in May 2016 after a growing rift with the party organization, is­sued an open criticism in the wa­ke of the March 31 local electi­ons. The other three former law­makers are allegedly in close con­tact with the former premier, who is also rumored to have been pre­paring to launch a splinter mo­vement.

Attempts to form a new political party would do nothing except help the AK Party consoli­date its voter base and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan gain mo­re political strength, early analyses suggested.

Another splinter faction seems to be led by former Deputy Pri­me Minister Ali Babacan.

Baba­can oversaw the economy and was also one of the founders of the AK Party. He made his inten­tion to form a new political party more explicit following the Mar­ch 31 local elections.

In his letter resigning from the AK Party pub­lished Monday, Babacan said the­re had been serious divergences between the principles he belie­ves in and the AK Party’s polici­es in recent years, adding that the country has “a new, dynamic ge­neration that has different expe­ctations.” “In the current conditi­ons we are going through, Turkey needs a new vision for the future. Our country needs the right analy­ses, strategies and plans in every field,” he said in the letter.

He also stressed that new politi­cal formations that have emerged with the new executive presidenti­al system should be carefully anal­yzed.

The People’s Alliance, for­med by the AK Party and the MHP, gained 51.6 percent of the votes and won more than 700 munici­palities in the March 31 local pol­ls.

However, the alliance lost in the three biggest cities – Istanbul, An­kara and Izmir – to its opponent, the Nation’s Alliance, which was formed by the Republican Peop­le’s Party (CHP) and the İP. Last week, talking about the preparati­ons of Babacan and former Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu to form new political parties, Erdoğan po­inted out that splinter movements from the ruling AK Party had not been successful in the past. Tur­kish politics has often witnessed the forming of new political parti­es that fail to attract supporters or leave a mark on politics.