Former Turkish lawmaker Hüseyin Aygün has alleged that ex-CHP (Republican People's Party) chairman Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu acted under the influence of Turkey’s National Intelligence Organization (MİT) and helped redesign the party through intelligence-led purges, in a detailed social media post reported by the daily Cumhuriyet. In his lengthy social media post, Aygün claims that Kılıçdaroğlu moved in line with intelligence guidance and that the CHP was effectively “redesigned” on this basis. He argues that the roots of today’s internal crisis lie in the 2015 and 2018 election cycles, when, according to him, critical and left-leaning figures inside the party were systematically sidelined. Aygün frames these developments as part of a broader effort he describes as the “occupation” of the CHP and the erosion of the Republic’s founding values through the actions of an “old chairman” installed as a kind of political “trustee.” Alleged Mi̇t Warning Over Syria Work One of Aygün’s central exam...
Turkey’s main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) has been thrust into one of the most turbulent episodes in its history after a “nullity” (butlan) ruling and a police raid on its Ankara headquarters triggered a three‑day political shockwave, columnist Barış Terkoğlu writes in the daily Cumhuriyet. In his 25 May piece , Terkoğlu argues that the operation against the founding party of the republic marks a new stage in President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s unconstrained rule. According to Terkoğlu, the butlan ruling on CHP’s internal processes was not an isolated judicial act but part of a broader political design to render the party ungovernable rather than simply change its leadership. Police stormed the CHP headquarters, fired gas into its corridors and in effect pushed the party into a prolonged period of internal strife between its grassroots and leadership. Terkoğlu notes that although senior CHP figures had expected a ruling, they were caught unprepared for the speed and scope o...