ANKARA â Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan won reelection Sunday, extending his increasingly authoritarian rule into a third decade as the country reels from high inflation and the aftermath of an earthquake that leveled entire cities.
A third term gives Erdogan, a polarizing populist, an even stronger hand domestically and internationally, and the election results will have implications far beyond the capital of Ankara. Turkey stands at the crossroads of Europe and Asia, and it plays a key role in NATO.
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With more than 99% of ballot boxes opened, unofficial results from competing news agencies showed Erdogan with 52% of the vote, compared with 48% for his challenger, Kemal Kilicdaroglu. The head of Turkeyâs electoral board confirmed the victory, saying that even after accounting for outstanding votes, the result was another term for Erdogan.
In two speeches â one in Istanbul and one in Ankara â Erdogan thanked the nation for entrusting him with the presidency for five more years.
âWe hope to be worthy of your trust, as we have been for 21 years,â he told supporters on a campaign bus outside his home in Istanbul in his first comments after the results emerged.
He ridiculed his challenger for his loss, saying âbye bye bye, Kemal,â as supporters booed. He said the divisions of the election are now over, but he continued to rail against his opponent as well as the former co-leader of the pro-Kurdish party who has been imprisoned for years over alleged links to terrorism.
âThe only winner today is Turkey,â Erdogan said to hundreds of thousands gathered outside the presidential palace in Ankara, promising to work hard for Turkey's second century, which he calls the âTurkish century.â The country marks its centennial this year.
Kilicdaroglu campaigned on promises to reverse Erdoganâs democratic backsliding, to restore the economy by reverting to more conventional policies and to improve ties with the West. He said the election was âthe most unjust ever,â with all state resources mobilized for Erdogan.
âWe will continue to be at the forefront of this struggle until real democracy comes to our country,â he said in Ankara. He thanked the more than 25 million people who voted for him and asked them to âremain upright.â
The people have shown their will "to change an authoritarian government despite all the pressures,â he said.
Supporters of Erdogan took to the streets to celebrate, waving Turkish or ruling party flags, honking car horns and chanting his name. Celebratory gunfire was heard in several Istanbul neighborhoods.
Erdoganâs government vetoed Swedenâs bid to join NATO and purchased Russian missile-defense systems, which prompted the United States to oust Turkey from a U.S.-led fighter-jet project. But Turkey also helped broker a crucial deal that allowed Ukrainian grain shipments and averted a global food crisis.
âNo one can look down on our nation,â Erdogan said in Istanbul.
Steven A. Cook, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Council on Foreign Relations, said Turkey was likely to âmove the goal postâ on Swedenâs membership in NATO as it seeks demands from the United States.
He also said Erdogan, who has spoken about introducing a new constitution, was likely to make an even greater push for it to lock in changes overseen by his conservative and religious Justice and Development Party, or AKP.
Erdogan, who has been at Turkeyâs helm for 20 years, came just short of victory in the first round of elections on May 14. It was the first time he failed to win an election outright, but he made up for it Sunday.
Congratulations poured in from world leaders, including Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, whose countries are at war in Ukraine.
Putin said Erdogan's victory was âclear evidenceâ that the Turkish people support his efforts to âstrengthen state sovereignty and pursue an independent foreign policy.â
Zelenskyy said he was counting on building the partnership between the two countries and strengthening cooperation "for the security and stability of Europe.â
U.S. President Joe Biden said he looked forward "to continuing to work together as NATO allies on bilateral issues and shared global challenges.â
The two candidates offered sharply different visions of the country's future, and its recent past.
Critics blame Erdoganâs unconventional economic policies for skyrocketing inflation that has fueled a cost-of-living crisis. Many also faulted his government for a slow response to the earthquake that killed more than 50,000 people in Turkey.
In his victory remarks, Erdogan said rebuilding the quake-struck cities would be his priority, and he said a million Syrian refugees would go back to Turkish-controlled âsafe zonesâ in Syria as part of a resettlement project being run with Qatar.
Erdogan has retained the backing of conservative voters who remain devoted to him for lifting Islamâs profile in Turkey, which was founded on secular principles, and for raising the countryâs influence in world politics.
In Ankara, Erdogan voter Hacer Yalcin said Turkeyâs future was great. âOf course Erdogan is the winner ... Who else? He has made everything for us," Yalcin said. âGod blesses us!â
Erdogan, a 69-year-old Muslim, is set to remain in power until 2028.
He transformed the presidency from a largely ceremonial role to a powerful office through a narrowly won 2017 referendum that scrapped Turkeyâs parliamentary system of governance. He was the first directly elected president in 2014, and won the 2018 election that ushered in the executive presidency.
The first half of Erdoganâs tenure included reforms that allowed the country to begin talks to join the European Union, and economic growth that lifted many out of poverty. But he later moved to suppress freedoms and the media and concentrated more power in his own hands, especially after a failed coup attempt that Turkey says was orchestrated by the U.S.-based Islamic cleric Fethullah Gulen. The cleric denies involvement.
Erdogan's rival was a soft-mannered former civil servant who has led the pro-secular Republican Peopleâs Party, or CHP, since 2010.
In a frantic effort to reach out to nationalist voters in the runoff, Kilicdaroglu vowed to send back refugees and ruled out peace negotiations with Kurdish militants if he is elected.
In Kurdish-majority Diyarbakir, 37-year-old metalworker Ahmet Koyun said everyone would have to accept the results.
âIt is sad on behalf of our people that a government with such corruption, such stains, has come into power again. Mr. Kemal would have been great for our country, at least for a change of scene,â he said.
Sunday also marked the 10th anniversary of the start of mass anti-government protests that broke out over plans to uproot trees in Istanbulâs Gezi Park. The demonstrations became one of the most serious challenges to Erdoganâs government.
Erdoganâs response to the protests, in which eight people were convicted, was a harbinger of a crackdown on civil society and freedom of expression.
Erdogan and pro-government media portrayed Kilicdaroglu, who received the backing of the countryâs pro-Kurdish party, as colluding with âterroristsâ and of supporting what they described as âdeviantâ LGBTQ rights.
In his victory speech, he repeated those themes, saying LGBTQ people cannot âinfiltrateâ his ruling party or its nationalist allies.
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Bilginsoy reported from Istanbul. Bela Szandelszky in Ankara, Turkey; Mucahit Ceylan in Diyarbakir, Turkey; and Cinar Kiper in Bodrum, Turkey, contributed to this report.