MHP leader Bahçeli stresses new constitution bill
The MHP lieder does not deny allegations of assassination attempt
- Türkiye
- Published Date: 12:00 | 03 January 2017
- Modified Date: 03:49 | 03 January 2017
The leader of Turkey's opposition Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) said Tuesday he would back a parliamentary bill to change the country's constitution.
The move - the first open commitment to support the bill by the MHP leader - brings a potential change to a presidential system one step closer.
Responding to journalists' questions after a MHP parliamentary group meeting in Ankara, Devlet Bahçeli said: "I will give a Yes vote to the new constitutional bill and I will repeat it in the referendum."
However, it is not clear if all MHP lawmakers will follow their leader's move. The party has seen internal divisions since Turkey's November 2015 general election which saw it fall to fourth place in parliament.
Devlet Bahçeli also spoke to reporters about the allegations of assassination attempts on People's Republican Party (CHP) opposition leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu and on himself. "News that Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu was concentrating on assassination tips were reported in the media. Everyone determinedly goes the way he believes in. I believe Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu will do the same," he said. His words indicate that he does not deny the news.
Turkish government has said it would put the constitutional changes to a referendum, even if the proposals gained enough support from lawmakers to pass through parliament.
The new constitutional bill needs 330 votes to pave the way for a referendum.
The AK Party has 316 seats and the MHP has 40 seats in the parliament.
Constitutional change - in particular, the call for a presidential system - has been on the political agenda since Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, the former prime minister and Justice and Development (AK) Party leader, was elected Turkey's president in August 2014.
That election was the first time a Turkish head of state was directly chosen by popular vote.
In the current parliamentary model, the Turkish electorate votes for 550 lawmakers. A government is formed by a minimum number of 276 members of parliament.
In the proposed presidential system, the electorate would vote for a person to form a government independently of parliament, with no need for a vote of confidence.
Two other opposition groups in parliament - the People's Republican Party (CHP) and Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) - remain opposed to the presidential system.
Daily Sabah