Turks living in Turkey won’t be the only ones voting for a new president and parliament in the upcoming general election on May 14 — Turkish citizens all over the world will also take part. That’s also true in Germany, which has the largest Turkish diaspora.
According to a migration report publicized five years ago by Germany’s Federal Office for Migration and Refugees (BAMF), there are around 2.8 million people living in Germany who have a Turkish migration background, and approximately half of them have Turkish citizenship.
Between April 27 and May 9, Turkish citizens living in Germany can cast their ballots at 14 foreign representative offices and consulates. Turkey’s Consul General Turhan Kaya told DW that he was unable reveal any specifics about the voting process as it was pending approval from German officials.
The outcome of the election is still up in the air, and this time Recep Tayyip Erdogan might actually lose. His challenger Kemal Kilicdaroglu of the social-democratic and Kemalist Republican People’s Party (CHP) has widespread political and societal support.
But if the election took place in Germany, Erdoğan and his Justice and Development party (AKP) would enjoy a decisive victory.
Metin Şirin has been living in Cologne for 43 years. He worked for Ford-Werke, a subsidiary of Ford Motor Company, for four decades, and was an active union member.
Şirin has voted for Erdogan before, and he told DW he will do so again in the upcoming election. “My sympathy for the AKP has increased in the last 20 years,” he said.
“People with Turkish roots in Germany vote overwhelmingly for Erdoğan. That’s the reality,” explains Yunus Ulusoy from the Center for Studies on Turkey and Integration Research (ZfTI) at the University of Duisburg-Essen.
Almost 63% of Turks living in Germany voted for Erdoğan’s constitutional referendum in 2017, even though only 51% of Turks living in Turkey supported the measure. The referendum transformed the country from a parliamentary system into a presidential system.
The country’s 2018 presidential elections followed a similar trend as 64.8% of Turks living in Germany voted for Erdogan, while a significantly smaller 52.6% of the population in Turkey voted for his reelection.
Support for Erdoğan among Turks is also not nearly as widespread in other foreign countries. In 2018, Erdogan received just 17% of the votes from Turkish citizens living in the US, 21% from those living in the UK, 35% from those living in Iran, and 29% from those in Qatar.
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The voting trends of Turks living in Germany have been heavily criticized. One of the points raised is that their preferences are contradictory: How could Turkish Germans vote for the Social Democrats or the Green Party in Germany, the arguments goes, while simultaneously voting for the Islamic, conservative AKP in Turkey?
To Şirin, it’s a rational choice, and — far from being fanatic — possibly even a sign for how open conservative Turkish voters in Germany are to change. “People vote for the party that represents their interests. That’s a positive thing,” Şirin said.
Political analysts view the situation similarly. “Even when living abroad, people still look to parties with views similar to their own. Once the question among Turks was, ‘should I vote for the Christian Democratic CDU or the Social Democratic SPD?’ A lot of Turkish voters belonged to the working class back then, which meant the SPD’s international orientation was closer to conservative Turks’ preferences than that of the conservative CDU,” explained integration expert Ulusoy.
The first Turks that emigrated to postwar Germany primarily came from the rural Anatolian region, which is quite conservative. “When people emigrate, the values they bring with them continue to develop. Their religious-conservative views are preserved in the diaspora,” Ulusoy said.
An important factor in Şirin’s decision to vote for the AKP has been Turkey’s development under Erdogan’s leadership. He is quite pleased with advances in many areas, including healthcare, transportation and defense, and compares modern-day Turkey with the Germany of his past.
Ulusoy criticized that many Germans did not even try to understand the voting patterns of conservative Turks. While is was easy to “ideologically judge or scandalize” these voting trends, he said, there should be more effort made to understand what motivates voters. Ulusoy also suggested the German public focuses too heavily on Turkish voting habits.
“Are German Turks the only ones who vote in their home countries? Of course not. Italians living in Germany can also vote, and a right-wing government was recently elected in Italy. Yet nobody knows how Italians living in Germany voted, and nobody is curious to know,” Ulusoy argued.
Erdoğan seems to fill a gap left open by the German state. “For the past 60 years, German politicians have had a hard time acknowledging Turkish people and saying to them ‘You belong to this country, regardless of whether you founded BioNTech or are a youth who took part in riots on New Year’s Eve. Even if you make a mistake, you are still one of us.’ Erdoğan communicates just that. He tells them ‘regardless of where you are, or what citizenship you have, you belong to us.'”
Sociologist Sabrina Mayer from the University of Bamberg holds a similar view. “It’s easy for Erdogan to reach people with roots in Turkey who long to be appreciated for their Turkish heritage,” she told DW. She believes the political class in Germany has never given German Turks the feeling that they belong to German society.
Mayer points out that for years German politicians failed to streamline the naturalization process for Turkish citizens living in the federal republic. She says that is a far cry from the rights afforded to people who lived in Russia and other former Soviet states, who, thanks to Article 116 of Germany’s Basic Law, are able to become German citizens with far less effort than Turks.
“These factors lead younger people, third-generation immigrants for example, to vote for Erdogan out of spite,” said Ulusoy.
Şirin agrees: “In recent years, conservative [Turkish] people have been excluded by Germany’s political parties because of Erdogan. That’s a really unfortunate development. The exclusion causes a reaction, and eventually people start supporting Erdogan as a result.”
Regardless of how the general election on May 14 turns out, Şirin still wants to exercise his right to vote and have representation. “Even though I live in Germany, and have for 43 years, I still can’t vote in local elections. That’s exclusion and it makes me sad. In Turkey on the other hand, I have the right to vote. I’m proud to be able to help determine something that impacts our citizens.”
This is a shorter version of an article that was originally translated from the German by Deutsche Welle English.
The views and opinions expressed above are the author’s and do not represent those of the Free Turkish Press.