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Turkish presidential election, 2007

Turkish presidential election, 2007
Turkey
2000 ←
August 28, 2007 (2007-08-28)
(Second attempt third round)
→ 2014

All 550 Members of Parliament voting in the Grand National Assembly of Turkey
276 votes needed to win
Turnout 81.45%
  Abdullah Gül Davos.jpg Sabahattin Çakmakoğlu (cropped).jpg No image.png
Nominee Abdullah Gül Sabahattin Çakmakoğlu Hüseyin Tayfun İçli
Party AK Party MHP Democratic Left
MP votes 339 70 13
Percentage 80.1% 16.5% 3.1%

Turkish presidential election 2007.png


President before election

Ahmet Necdet Sezer
Independent

Elected President

Abdullah Gül
AK Party


Turkish presidential election 2007.png

Ahmet Necdet Sezer
Independent

Abdullah Gül
AK Party

The 2007 Turkish presidential election refers to two attempts to elect the country's 11th president, to succeed Ahmet Necdet Sezer. The most likely candidate for president was Abdullah Gül. Turkey's presidential office is regarded as the guardian of the country's secular system; the fact that Gül's wife wears the Islamic headscarf, as well as his own history in political Islam, turned the elections into a political crisis.

The first attempt consisted of the first rounds on 27 April and its repeat on 6 May after Turkey's constitutional court annulled the first round on 27 April. The constitutional court decided that a quorum of two-thirds was necessary, which was impossible without opposition support. Both first rounds were almost entirely boycotted by opposition MPs to disable the voting to start. Therefore, the ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) was unsuccessful in electing its candidate, foreign minister Abdullah Gül. AK Party then called a snap election which was held on July 22, 2007. The general elections saw it returned to government with a larger proportion of the vote. Subsequently, Gül was renominated and was finally elected in the third round of the second attempt of presidential election. The first round of this voting was on 20 August, while a second was on 24 August and a third was on 28 August. There was a quorum this time, since some opposition parties, most importantly the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), did not boycott the election.


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