1、Congressional Research Service The Library of CongressCRS Report for CongressReceived through the CRS WebOrder Code RS21355November 14, 2002 Turkeys November 3, 2002 National Electionname redactedSpecialist in Middle Eastern AffairsForeign Affairs, Defense, and Trade DivisionSummary In Turkeys Novem
2、ber 3, 2002 national election, voters vented their frustrationsover an impoverishing recession, a painful International Monetary Fund program, andendemic corruption by expelling the governing coalition parties and others. The Justiceand Development Party (AKP), which has Islamist roots, won by occup
3、ying the terrainof the majority center-right of Turkish politics. It will form a government without itsleader, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has been banned because of an Islamist speech.AKPs highest priorities are economic recovery and accession negotiations with theEuropean Union. It might offer the U
4、nited States a useful model of a Muslimdemocracy, and its initially pragmatic foreign policy may be in line with U.S. aimsregarding Iraq, Cyprus, and the European Union. (See also CRS Report RL31794, Iraq:Turkey and the Deployment of U.S. Forces.BackgroundThe April 1999 national election in Turkey b