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Wuthrich, F. Michael

WORK TITLE: National Elections in Turkey
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https://kups.ku.edu/f-michael-wuthrich * https://kups.ku.edu/sites/kups.drupal.ku.edu/files/docs/Wuthrich-CV2012-worefs.pdf * http://global.ku.edu/f-michael-wuthrich * http://crees.ku.edu/f-michael-wuthrich

RESEARCHER NOTES:

PERSONAL

Male.

EDUCATION:

University of Kansas, B.A. (psychology), B.A. (English), 1998, M.A., 2001; Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey, Ph.D., 2011.

ADDRESS

  • Office - University of Kansas, Center for Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies, Bailey Hall Rm. 2014, 1440 Jayhawk Blvd., Lawrence, KS 66045-7574

CAREER

Political scientist, educator, and writer. University of Kansas, graduate teaching assistant in the Applied English Center, 2000-01, lecturer, 2001-02, 2011–, part-time lecturer in the Political Science Department, 2012–, also visiting assistant professor and academic director at the university’s Center for Global and International  Studies Programs of the Center for Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies; Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey, faculty academic English instructor, teacher developer, and administrative unit head, 2002-08, graduate teaching assistant in the Political Science Department, 2010-11.

MEMBER:

American Political Science Association, Middle East Studies Association, Midwest Political Science Association.

WRITINGS

  • National Elections in Turkey: People, Politics, and the Party System, Syracuse University Press (Syracuse, NY), 2015

Contributor to professional journals, including Journal of Middle East Studies, Middle East Journal, Southeast European and Black Sea Studies, and Turkish Studies.

SIDELIGHTS

F. Michael Wuthrich is a political scientist whose research interests include electoral politics of the Middle East Region with a particular expertise in Turkey and comparative politics. His research focus includes political parties, party systems, voting behavior, the dynamic intersections of institutions, and structure and agency, as well as the points of interaction between religion, nationalism and politics. He is also interest in social and cultural theory and politics, especially political and/or social group formation and maintenance. Wuthrich received his doctorate in Turkey, where he lived and worked for nine years. He speaks both Turkish and German.

A contributor to professional journals, Wuthrich is also the author of National Elections in Turkey: People, Politics, and the Party System. The book examines what determines voting behavior in Turkey, especially in relation to the center-right-religious-conservative leadership of the Justice and Development Party, which has been the predominant party in Turkey in the twenty-first century. Wuthrich presents his belief that, contrary to the belief held by some political scientists that static social or cultural cleavages are the primary influence on Turkish voters,  Wuthrich maintains that the bigger influence is  the political parties’ methods of strategic vote-getting. “While it seems foolhardy to neglect the importance of identity and in-group/out-group categorizations in voting behavior in any society with regular democratic elections, a more careful, systematic approach to the empirical data and the campaigns in Turkey strongly suggests that identities have often been secondary concerns,” Wuthrich writes in the introduction to National Elections in Turkey.

Drawing from the political elite’s campaign speeches and election data on the national and provincial levels, Wuthrich  examines voter mobilization strategies across time to trace clear patterns related to major electoral behavior shifts. He discusses these shifts from the first truly democratic election in Turkey in 1950 on through 2011, focusing primarily on various campaign strategies that were implemented. Wuthrich points out in his introduction that political scientists have taken two problematic directions in studying elections in Turkey. The first is that the success of Turkey’s far-right conservative politicians is related primarily to the country’s Islamic conservative population. The second issue, writes Wuthrich, is the tendency to focus research on historical accounts in a party-centric approach, that is, focusing on individual parties without considering the broader context of the environment in which the parties operate. Wuthrich writes that there are numerous other complicating factors related to Turkish politics and elections, such as military inventions that have reset democratic governance in Turkey on several occasions. He notes how various political parties also have played a role at times in restructuring electoral rules as well.

Wuthrich notes that, in the second decade of the twenty-first century, Turkey has elected leaders who have taken a more authoritarian approach to governing, leading to questions concerning the viability of Turkish democracy in the future. “Therefore, in such context and because of its prominent place in the operation of Turkish politics and democracy, understanding  the behavior of the party system and electoral politics in Turkey becomes a critical focus of study,” Wuthrich writes in National Elections in Turkey, pointing out that such research not only provides insights into theTurkish party system and election outcomes “but also the nature of politics and democracy in general in Turkey.”  

National Elections in Turkey is broken up into two parts. The first part examines previous approaches and assumptions concerning national elections. It include a look at the roles of religion and left/right ideologies in Turkish elections. The second part examines different distinct electoral paradigms, including the ideological imaging paradigm, the cultural-identity paradigm, and the predominant party paradigm. In the process, Wuthrich shows how parties have been effective in capturing the loyalty of Turkish voters, noting that ideological considerations are second in importance to economic and material considerations. “Unlike most such books, this one is written in jargon-free English,” wrote R.W. Olson in Choice. In a review of Middle East Quarterly, Burak Bekdil recommended the book as insightful, especially for those “who view the Turkish political landscape with unease because of the direction that the seemingly unchallenged Islamists … are taking.”

BIOCRIT
BOOKS

  • Wuthrich, F. Michael, National Elections in Turkey: People, Politics, and the Party System, Syracuse University Press (Syracuse, NY), 2015.

PERIODICALS

  • Choice, April, 2016, R.W. Olson, review of National Elections in Turkey, p. 1234.

  • Middle East Quarterly, summer, 2016, Burak Bekdil, review of National Elections in Turkey.

ONLINE

  • Hurriyet Daily News Online, http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/ (September 17, 2016), William Armstrong, “Interview: Michael Wuthrich on the History of Elections in Turkey and the Future of Turkish Democracy.”

  • University of Kansas Center for Russian, East European & Eurasian Studies, http://crees.ku.edu/ (April 4, 2017), author faculty profile.

  • University of Kansas Political Science Department Web site, https://kups.ku.edu/ (April 4, 2017), author CV.*

  • National Elections in Turkey: People, Politics, and the Party System Syracuse University Press (Syracuse, NY), 2015
1. National elections in Turkey : people, politics, and the party system LCCN 2015016597 Type of material Book Personal name Wuthrich, F. Michael. Main title National elections in Turkey : people, politics, and the party system / F. Michael Wuthrich. Edition First edition. Published/Produced Syracuse, New York : Syracuse University Press, 2015. Description xv, 342 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm. ISBN 9780815634126 (cloth : alkaline paper) Shelf Location FLM2016 040378 CALL NUMBER JQ1809.A5 W88 2015 OVERFLOWJ34 Request in Jefferson or Adams Building Reading Rooms (FLM2)
  • Author C.V. - https://kups.ku.edu/sites/kups.drupal.ku.edu/files/docs/Wuthrich-CV2012-worefs.pdf

    F. Michael Wuthrich1Office: 318 BlakeHallLawrence, KS66045Phone: (785) 864-1120E-mail: mwuthrich@ku.eduRESEARCH INTERESTS:Electoral politics of the MiddleEast Regionin general with particular expertise in Turkey; Comparative Politics, particularly political parties,party systems, voting behavior, the dynamic intersections of institutions, structure and agency, and also the points of interaction between religion, nationalism and politics;and Social and Cultural Theory and Politics, particularly political and/or social group formation and maintenance.EDUCATION:2008-11Bilkent UniversityPhD, Political Science GPA: 3.931998-2001University of KansasMA, Education (Curriculum &Instruction)GPA: 4.01993-98 University of KansasBA, PsychologyGPA: 3.66--BA, English (Creative Writing)RELATED TEACHINGEXPERIENCE:F’2012-Pres.Part-time Lecturer, Political Science Department, University of KansasSlated to teach the “Introduction to International Politics” (POLS 170) course and a section of the “Introduction to Comparative Politics” (POLS 150) courseoPOLS 170 involves conducting two 1-hour lecture sessions and working together with GTAs who then lead a discussion session2011-PresentLecturer, Applied English Center, University of KansasTeach a variety of levels, but particularly advanced levels, in reading and writing to international studentsTeach a special reading class to Fulbright graduate students scholars as part of a pre-academic program prior to placement in their university departments2010-2011Graduate Teaching Assistant, Political Science Department, Bilkent UniversityTaught“Introduction to Sociology” courseto political science students, including lecturing,creatingallexams, and assessmentfor sixty-fivestudentsAssistedprimary instructor for an “Introduction to Social Psychology” coursefor political science students, including utilizing an LMS, creating and assessing assignments, and facilitating course discussions2002-2008Faculty Academic EnglishInstructor, Teacher Developer, and Administrative Unit Head, Bilkent UniversityFrom 1/08-7/08, operated as the head of a teaching unit of eleven instructors and engaged in scheduling,teacher training, providing workshops, guiding curriculum development,evaluating classroom instruction of unit teachers, interviewing prospective instructors for the program, giving workshops, and acting as a liaison between the department and the departments that we served among numerous other duties.From 1/07-12/08, with assistance from another instructor, developed and implemented a professional development diploma course for instructors in the English school centered on curriculum development, implementation, and research in an academic setting, emphasizing the communication of critical thought. From 2004-08, taught a special course to PhD students in the political science department focusing on improving the level of academic communication and academic writing for publication, in particular
    F. Michael Wuthrich2Regularly created content-based curriculum as a medium to teach academic language skills to first year students in an English-medium universityRegularly contributed workshops and development seminars for the seventy instructors in the program and at conferences2001-2002Lecturer,Applied English Center, University of Kansas2000-2001Graduate Teaching Assistant, Applied English Center, University of KansasTeach language classes to students ofvarious language skills and proficiency levelsCreate, plan, and utilize portfolios in anintegrated skills classroomDevelop and supplement content-based curriculum for advanced level courseRELATED PUBLICATIONS and PROJECTS:Journal Articles:F. Michael Wuthrich, “Factors Influencing Military-Media Relations in Turkey,” Middle East Journal, Vol. 66, No. 2(2012), pp.253-72.http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/mei/mei/2012/00000066/00000002/art00003F. Michael Wuthrich, withMurat Ardağ and Deniz Uğur, “Politics, Cultural Heterogeneity and Support for the European Union in Turkey,” Southeast European and Black Sea Studies,Vol. 12, No. 1 (2012), pp. 45-62. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14683857.2012.661221F. Michael Wuthrich, “Commercial Media, the Military, and Society in Turkey during Failed and Successful Interventions,” Turkish Studies, Vol. 11, No. 2 (2010), pp. 217-34.http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all~content=a922850298~frm=titlelink?words=michael%2CwuthrichBook Projects:F. Michael Wuthrich, Paradigms and Dynamic Change in the Turkish Party System. (Prospectus being reviewed byCambridge University Press).Journal Article under Review:F. Michael Wuthrich, “An Essential Center-Periphery Electoral Cleavage and the Turkish Party System,” (revise & resubmit stage, International Journal of Middle East Studies).Review Article:F. Michael Wuthrich, “The Kurdish Question in Turkey, Iraq and Beyond,” Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 48, No. 2(2012), pp. 303-10.http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00263206.2012.652858Papers in Progress:F. Michael Wuthrich, “Patterned Electoral Behavior and Systematic Analysis of a Single Case: Shifting Dimensions of Competition in Turkish Elections,” (draft completed and being prepared for submission.)F. Michael Wuthrich, “Three Paradoxes in the Development of Kurdish Nationalism in Turkey,” (writing-in-progress).Sabri Ciftci and F. Michael Wuthrich, “Measuring Moderation and Islamist Party Behavior in the Middle East and North Africa,” (research-in-progress).Major Conference Papers:F. Michael Wuthrich, “Three Paradoxes in the Development of Kurdish Nationalism in Turkey,” (accepted for the Middle East Studies Association 2012 Conference, November, 2012).
    F. Michael Wuthrich3F. Michael Wuthrich, “An Essential Center-Periphery Electoral Cleavage and the Turkish Party System,” Middle East StudiesAssociation 2011 Conference, December 2011.Book Reviews:Mediterranean Politics, Vol. 15, No. 2 (2010), pp. 299-300: Islamism, Democracy and Liberalism in Turkey: The Case of the AKPby William Hale and Ergun Özbudun.http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all~content=a923464685~frm=titlelink?words=michael,wuthrichMiddle Eastern Studies, Vol. 46, No. 5 (2010), pp. 779-82: Islam’sMarriage with Neoliberalism: State Transformation in Turkeyby Yıldız Atasoy.http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all~content=a926637811~frm=titlelink?words=michael,wuthrichTurkish Studies, Vol. 11, No. 3 (2010), pp. 503-8: Daring and Caution in Turkish Strategic Culture: Republic at Seaby Malik Mufti.http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all~content=a927151407~frm=titlelink?words=michael,wuthrichCurrent and Future Research Plans:A Quantitative study examining the competing hypotheses of determinantsof Islamist political partymoderation in approximately 20 Muslim-majority countries over time.The framework for a new systematic approach to in-depth analysis of the operation of individual party systems over time.Three Paradoxes of the Development of Kurdish Nationalism –seeks to address why a community of approximately 25 million with strong cultural and linguistic ties has failed to become a “nation.”Nation Formation and Geography –a comparative study of Kurds, Kashmiris, Uyghurs, and Tibetans in regard to nationalism and “nation development.”Comparative Approaches to “electoral competition” in the Middle East –a comparative study of electoral politics in Turkey, Iran, Kuwait and Lebanon.Dissertation: Paradigms and Dynamic Change in the Turkish Party System, (defended and passed, May 5, 2011). Dissertation Advisor: ProfessorDr.Metin Heper, Provost. Committee Members: Professor Dr. Ergun Özbudun, Professor Dr. Sabri Sayarı(Sabancı University).PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS:American Political Science Association, since 2011Midwest Political Science Association, since 2011Middle East Studies Association, since 2011FOREIGN LANGUAGES:Turkish –advancedGerman –basic

  • KU - http://crees.ku.edu/f-michael-wuthrich

    F. Michael Wuthrich
    Academic Director, Global & International Studies Academic Programs
    Visiting Assistant Professor, Center for Global and International Studies
    mwuthrich@ku.edu
    (785) 864-0508
    Bailey Hall, Rm. 214

    Bio

    Academics

    Publications
    Ph.D., Bilkent 2011

    Research Areas: Electoral politics of the Middle East, with particular expertise in Turkey, Comparative Politics, Interaction of religion, nationalism and politics, Social and Cultural Theory and Politics

    Countries: Turkey
    Languages: Turkish, German

    Mike Wuthrich is a Visiting Assistant Professor and Academic Director of Global & International Studies Academic Programs in the Center for Global and International Studies. He received his PhD in Political Science from Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey in 2011. His interests are Middle East politics, parties and party systems, electoral behavior, religion, and nationalism. After nine years of living and working in Turkey, he has developed a particular interest in all things Turkish, particularly those related to politics, society and culture.

    Courses Recently Taught
    Intro to International Politics
    Intro to Comp. Politics
    Intro to Global & Int’l Studies
    Intro to Int’l Studies
    Interdisciplinary Research Methods for Global Contexts
    Nationalism & Nationalisms in Turkey

    Teaching
    Comparative Politics, Middle East Politics, Parties and Party Systems, Electoral Behavior, Religion and Politics, Nationalism and Politics

    Selected Publications
    His publications have appeared in the International Journal of Middle East Studies, Middle East Journal, Southeast European and Black Sea Studies, and Turkish Studies. His book, National Elections in Turkey: People, Politics, and the Party System was published by Syracuse University Press in 2015.

  • Hurriyet Daily News - http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/interview-michael-wuthrich-on-the-history-of-elections-in-turkey-and-the-future-of-turkish-democracy.aspx?pageID=238&nid=103944&NewsCatID=386

    INTERVIEW: Michael Wuthrich on the history of elections in Turkey and the future of Turkish democracy
    William Armstrong - william.armstrong@hdn.com.tr

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    A rally in Istanbul for the Justice and Development Party (AKP) during the 2007 election campaign.
    A rally in Istanbul for the Justice and Development Party (AKP) during the 2007 election campaign.
    The belief that Turkish politics has for decades been defined by unchanging cultural divides is very widely held. An essential cleavage between religious and secular, educated and uneducated, central and peripheral voters is said to be the essential dynamic underpinning decades of political turbulence.

    American political scientist Michael Wuthrich challenges this in his book “National Elections in Turkey” (reviewed in HDN here). Through close analysis of electoral data and campaigns since 1950, Wuthrich shows how Turkish voters have primarily been motivated by material and economic considerations, with ideological considerations a distant second.

    He argues that today’s social divides are real but they cannot be mapped neatly onto political preferences in previous decades. The empirical data paints a far richer and more complicated picture. However, Wuthrich also suggests that this kind of close attention to electoral dynamics may now be a historical relic as Turkey moves to an authoritarian, dominant single-party system.

    He spoke to the Hürriyet Daily News about the history of elections in Turkey and the future of Turkish democracy.

    Belief in essential “center-periphery” divides going back decades are very popular in Turkey. But you paint a more complex picture. What’s the argument you put forward in the book?

    The book is intended to respond to several different existing approaches to elections in Turkey. One major approach was to assume that the Turkish electorate or voters were static in their voting: They voted according to social cleavages and identities, and tended to hold onto that regardless of what was happening. Another problematic approach to studying elections has been paying attention to just the campaign speeches or campaigning or focusing on the micro details of each election.

    I wanted to argue that yes there were patterns in how people voted in Turkey over time, but those patterns were changeable and they were strongly related to how the political parties themselves were trying to woo and mobilize voters. As those strategies morphed and changed over time, along with conditions, so did voting outcomes. In my book I lay out what I see as some important voting patterns based on different strategies that different parties used.

    You talk about how Turkish voters have generally been motivated by practical considerations rather than national or ideological concerns. Could you explain that with some concrete examples through the 1950s, 60s, 70s and beyond?

    A pragmatic, materialistic understanding of elections and voting has been ingrained in Turkish politics since the 1950s. It started with the Democrat Party [DP]. When the DP campaigned in the 1950s it wasn’t really trying to woo voters with identity or religion-based appeals - especially on the national scale or in campaign speeches. That remained true at least until its last election in 1957, when you see identity-based and religious appeals cropping up because they knew they were losing votes. But in the beginning the DP basically tried to make very pragmatic appeals to voters and communities. It was doing a lot of work on the ground, things that don’t show up in campaign speeches.

    A lot of voters in the 1950s had little knowledge of what was actually being said in the official campaigns of the two major parties. What seems to have generated the outcomes on election day were the patronage, clientelism and canvassing that party members did in various towns and villages in order to get people to vote for them for very practical reasons.

    Of course parties rarely use just one strategy, but that pragmatic sense of trying to use policy or patron-client relations to attract voters has continued to today. Even in the 2011 election, when there was a relatively high amount of ideological or identity polarization, the parties were often trying to woo the pocketbooks of voters. That’s true for the Nationalist Movement Party [MHP], the Republican People’s Party [CHP], the Justice and Development Party [AKP], and even to some extent the Peace and Democracy Party [BDP], the pro-Kurdish leftist party. Although they all had other elements in their platform, they mostly used economy-based pocketbook appeals to voters.

    People often look back at the DP as the first example of the periphery fighting back against the central republican elites. But you point out that if you look at the electoral map of results in the 1950s, the DP’s stronghold was in the western coastal regions, which is today seen as the “secular stronghold” of the CHP. The CHP, meanwhile, had its stronghold in the Kurdish-majority southeast. What explains this?

    Some of it had to do with different campaign strategies. The CHP had two strategies of interacting with the people. Areas that were remote from Ankara in the east, for example, were decentralized and weren’t strongly connected to the center or to national society. So the CHP developed relations with local notables, people who were basically the local political elites of the area. They developed relationships with them and made them the liaison for those areas. They knew they wouldn’t have great direct communication access with the people in those remote provinces, so they worked through local notables. During the single-party era, the CHP in the more centralized areas of the country sent political elites out to the local populace to talk and hear their grievances and find out what they wanted.

    When Turkey became a multi-party system, the CHP mostly relied on its strong relations with local notables. The DP politicians, meanwhile, adopted an approach of going out, trying to find what people wanted. You see an almost paradoxical consequence in the 1950s elections: The CHP was able to get votes from the least developed, least centralized, most peripheral areas of the country, while the DP was far more effective in the more developed urban and rural communities.

    On the “center-periphery” question, the DP was basically founded by CHP elites. Both parties were staffed with people who would have been considered part of the “center.” They both campaigned as central elites trying to woo the periphery in different ways. The DP was able to initially woo the more developed, centralized areas, while the CHP was able to woo the areas that were furthest from the center.

    We can also see a similar pattern in the 1960s and 70s. Particularly interesting was the 1970s, the high-watermark of the CHP’s success under Bülent Ecevit, when the party tried to woo poor urban voters through pocketbook, bread-and-butter issues.

    Ecevit was ingenious in his ability to recognize where votes could be mobilized. In the 1950s and 60s, when rural voters began migrating into the urban centers, initially it was the DP and the Justice Party [AP] - which was the legacy party of the DP - that was working in the squatter areas, the poorer urban areas. But Ecevit realized this was an opportunity that the CHP, based on its ideological position, could move into. So he crafted his political identity based on catering to these poor urban voters. He was also aware of the growing strength of the trade unions in Turkey at the time.

    So what you see is a huge change in the fortunes of the CHP. It went from having a base in the far eastern and most peripheral areas to losing all that vote and gaining big time in the urban industrial centers. It was particularly big in Zonguldak, for example, a place where there were mines and where there was a lot of blue-collar labor. It was making the same kind of pragmatic appeals and promises that the DP had made before.

    After the 1980 coup there was a big crackdown on all political parties and labor unions and groups that the CHP was interacting with. And a big vacuum opened up for new Islamist groups to do the same kind of work on the urban periphery. That was really the foundation of success for the Welfare Party [RP], which built up through local municipalities. Even though you had very ideological political Islamists, their foundation was built on pragmatic concerns about providing services to needy people.

    Yes absolutely. In the late 1980s the successor to the CHP was the Social Democratic Populist Party [SHP]. It had a key opportunity to govern the municipalities of all the major urban areas but it absolutely failed. Even things like just taking out the trash, the SHP absolutely blew that opportunity to show people that it was taking care of the little people and was really concerned about governance.

    The RP, meanwhile, benefited from its leader Necmettin Erbakan’s approach: Yes it was Islamist but it also had this kind of conservative social democrat appeal to it. That gave it a huge opportunity. Erbakan basically benefited from the failure of other parties to do the basic things we expect local governments to do. And ever since, what we call the center-left has never really recovered from its poor performance in the late 1980s when it had an opportunity.

    This center-periphery meta-narrative that you critique in the book was first proposed by Turkish sociologist Şerif Mardin in 1973. It has had a very pervasive influence on scholarship ever since. Why do you think it has been so seductive?

    Part of it is that the idea of a center and a periphery seems experientially true. This might be true in every society if you sit back and try to think about how things work. You imagine there are people from elite circles who are calling the shots while the vast majority of the people have no say. You can certainly feel that in Turkey.

    Şerif Mardin’s article actually spends most of its time on the Ottoman Empire. That’s exactly where you expect the center-periphery to be most applicable, and I actually agree with him on that. But the notion of a powerful center and a powerless periphery is confounded as soon as democracy and universal education enter the picture. The lines get blurred.

    Mardin did touch on the multi-party system toward the end of his article, but the center-periphery meta-narrative wasn’t really latched onto until the 1980s. Scholars started to see an east-west divide that looked kind of similar to it. But a lot of the studies that have tried to trace the center and periphery, especially in elections and party affiliation, have found it to be a bit of a Holy Grail. It seems more real in legend than what one finds in the data and the empirical evidence.

    What has happened over time is that people look at the divide today and they just call it “center-periphery.” But are we talking about an absolutely powerful group versus a powerful group? Is that the right way to describe the political cleavage today? I don’t think so. It’s certainly not the same cleavage that we would have been talking about 20 or 40 years ago. The voters who support various parties that we now lump into the center-periphery have changed in important ways.

    Research today that talks about the center-periphery is usually talking about a non-religious vs. religious political divide. But this is really problematic. If you look at almost all Western democracies you have a right and a left, with the “right” and the “conservatives” correlating with more religious practice, while leftists and progressives tend to be less religious. So in Turkey to call that the center and the periphery, especially when we can’t really trace it economically or using any other indicators, becomes misleading.

    One irony is that the center-periphery idea is subscribed to by both secularist and Islamist sides in Turkey today. Almost subconsciously it shapes the way they think about politics.

    That’s why I see it as a meta-narrative. It’s a convenient polemic for both sides. Both sides have used it to explain their various fortunes or failures. A lot of secularists will use it to separate themselves from the others and say “people don’t vote for center-left parties because they don’t have the education or enlightenment that we have.” They take a tutelary attitude to their own people that seems derogatory. And this stops them from analyzing why they’re not resonating with a lot of voters in Turkey.

    Meanwhile the conservatives, who like to represent themselves as the periphery, play off the martyr imagery: The powerless people who have been marginalized, oppressed or stomped down. But they are under-representing just how strong they have been, how the center-right and conservative parties have always had a major say in Turkish politics really since the 1950s. They have rarely not had control of the Prime Ministry.

    So the center-periphery idea is preventing both sides of the current political divide from understanding each other and understanding their political motives.

    The current ruling AKP initially rose based on this idea of competence and practical delivery. It still emphasizes that, but it has increasingly also heavily indulged in extremely ideological, polarizing, stigmatizing rhetoric, trying to motivate supporters in that way. Do you think we’ve reached a critical threshold?

    My last chapter leaves a big question mark about whether the pattern I trace in the book is in fact changing. During the mid- to late-1990s, and even through 2002 to 2007, it was the parties of the right that tended to be least ideological in their campaigning and a lot more pragmatic. It was the parties of the center-left that based their campaigns on a cultural struggle: An “us vs. them,” “light vs. dark” appeal. But in 2011 those poles shifted with the leadership of Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu in the CHP and also the contraction in the party system. This contraction, in which there was a smaller number of parties with less leeway, prompted the AKP to change its strategy to cater more in its campaigning in order to shore up the base. It’s true in any democracy that there’s often a benefit to political parties in increasing polarization, raising the stakes to try to keep voters from leaving.

    I also address the issue of the media in Turkey. So much of modern electoral campaigning - not just in Turkey but everywhere - is based on conventional and social media. So when a dominant governing party controls the media, directly or indirectly, it’s really not a completely free and fair election anymore. My book talks about the dynamics of democratic multi-party elections, but I wonder now whether those dynamics will become a historical relic in Turkey. Will we be able to continue seriously considering electoral dynamics in the same way as we did from 1950 to 2011?

    One way of looking at it is that there’s never been a party as dominant as the AKP, or a politician as dominant as Erdoğan. When they’ve been in power for so long they have such extensive access to state largess, as well as the ability to put such pressure on the media. You have to ask whether we can analyze electoral dynamics in the same way as before.

    All the components of the trouble that Turkish democracy is experiencing now were in the system at least from the 1980s. It’s just that those problems stayed under the surface because of the fragmentation of the party system. But once a party was able to dominate for such a long period of time, these other features come to the surface as real problems.

    When you have major corporate media holdings with other businesses that need government bids to survive, it takes away any semblance of independence. Even the media that’s technically independent ends up self-censoring because too much is at stake for its economic interests. When power was fragmented they could be more independent because there wasn’t one player that everyone had to cater to; there was a rotation of power so they didn’t have to put all their marbles into one bag. Having a single dominant government in Turkey since 2002 has radically altered the landscape.

    Recent events and regional and domestic instability also creates an opportunity for any dominant party to enhance its hold on power through security and governance policy. That’s not ideological, it’s just the nature of what happens when there’s a dominant party and not enough checks and balances.

    Follow the Turkey Book Talk podcast via iTunes here, Stitcher here, Podbean here, or Facebook here.
    September/17/2016

Wuthrich, F. Michael. National elections in Turkey: people, politics, and the party system
R.W. Olson
CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries. 53.8 (Apr. 2016): p1234.
Copyright: COPYRIGHT 2016 American Library Association CHOICE
http://www.ala.org/acrl/choice/about
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Wuthrich (assistant director, Center for Global and International Studies, Univ. of Kansas) interprets Turkey's politics and political culture since 1950. He does so with a rigorous rebuttal of the most authoritative interpretations of Turkey's electoral politics. Instead of gathering more data on endless theoretical paradigms, computer analyses, and statistical data that political scientists use to explain electoral behavior such as Left/Right, center/periphery, persistent political orientation, ideological imaging, and cultural identity paradigms, the author argues that the framework for electoral politics in Turkey should be centered on how parties compete for and mobilize voters. This approach, he argues, contextualizes Turkeys political parties and politics much better that the above-mentioned paradigms. Parties that have most effectively captured the "hearts of the electoral" have been those that approach the nation with both sociotropic and egotropic incentives--voting for the economic good of society as well as for the economic good of individuals. Unlike most such books, this one is written in jargon-free English. Interested readers should also consult Ergun Ozbudun, Party Politics and Social Cleavages in Turkey (CH, Dec'13, 51-2327). Summing Up: ** Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate, graduate, and research collections.--R. W. Olson, University of Kentucky

Olson, R.W. "Wuthrich, F. Michael. National elections in Turkey: people, politics, and the party system." CHOICE: Current Reviews for Academic Libraries, Apr. 2016, p. 1234+. General OneFile, go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=ITOF&sw=w&u=schlager&v=2.1&id=GALE%7CA449661839&it=r&asid=e223db9d7ffcebd7270c8d2582bdaed8. Accessed 13 Mar. 2017.
  • Middle East Quarterly
    http://www.meforum.org/6053/national-elections-turkey

    Word count: 295

    SUMMER 2016 • VOLUME 23: NUMBER 3

    National Elections in Turkey: People, Politics, and the Party System

    by F. Michael Wuthrich
    Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2015. 376 pp. $49.95.

    Reviewed by Burak Bekdil
    Hürriyet
    Middle East Quarterly
    Summer 2016
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    Wuthrich of the University of Kansas presents a useful analysis of Turkey's democratic electoral history, which essentially began in 1950 after decades of one-party rule under the Kemalist Republican People's Party (Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, CHP). For Turkey's opposition parties, whose votes seem more or less stuck in neutral since the Islamist Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, AKP) came to power in 2002, his research is indispensable.

    Wuthrich examines the rhetoric employed in contemporary campaigns, examining party election manifestos and campaign speeches as well as strategies deployed for collecting votes. He analyzes how today's political parties compete for votes and how the electorate is actually orienting itself within the current political environment. Without neglecting the importance of identity and in-group/out-group categorizations in voting, Wuthrich's research finds that those identities, including religious/secular, Turkish/Kurdish, and Sunni/Alevi divisions, have often been secondary concerns for the general electorate; more important concerns are bread-and-butter economic issues, unemployment, or anything beyond "identity." The author also uses graphs and tables to substantiate what every Turk knows but cannot verify: The electorate is inherently right-wing. In a voting bloc patterns table, Wuthrich shows, for example, that the "Right" bloc in Turkey increased from 59.8 percent in 1950 to 66.7 percent in 2011.

    Politicians as well as scholars who view the Turkish political landscape with unease because of the direction that the seemingly unchallenged Islamists led by Erdoğan are taking the country will benefit from Wuthrich's insights.

  • National Elections in Turkey: People, Politics, and the Party System
    https://books.google.com/books?id=GoH3CgAAQBAJ&pg=PR4&dq=national+elections+in+turkey&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj7iK6slYvTAhVL2oMKHVozAxYQ6AEIHjAB#v=onepage&q=national%20elections%20in%20turkey&f=true

    Word count: 0