[Two things are of vital significance.
One, the ruling AKP has lost its single-party majority whereas it was
dreaming of enhanced majority necessary to execute its project of
Constitutional amendment to give more powers to the President. That
dream has received a serious jolt.
Two, the "pro-Kurdish left-wing Peoples' Democracy Party (HDP) crossed
the country's unusually high 10 percent electoral threshold" and
thereby has won representations in the Turkish parliament, for the
first time ever.]

http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2015/06/ak-party-leads-turkish-parliamentary-polls-150607161827232.html

Ruling party loses majority in Turkey elections
Preliminary results suggest AK Party won polls, but lost absolute
majority in parliament due to pro-Kurdish party gains.

Umut Uras | 08 Jun 2015 02:25 GMT |

HDP supporters has started celebrating the election results in
predominantly Kurdish southeastern Turkey [Reuters]

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) has won Turkey's
parliamentary polls, but lost its single-party government, according
to the preliminary results.

The country's pro-Kurdish left-wing Peoples' Democracy Party (HDP)
crossed the country's unusually high 10 percent electoral threshold
that affected the distribution of seats and, consequently, the power
of the ruling party.

Official results based on 99.9 percent of votes counted gave the AK
Party got 41 percent of Sunday's votes, while the main opposition
Republican People's Party (CHP) scored 25 percent.

II.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/live/2015/jun/08/turkey-election-2015-ruling-party-loses-majority-as-pro-kurdish-hdp-gains-rolling-report

Turkey election 2015: speculation begins over which parties will form
majority government – live

Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan suffers his biggest setback in
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Supporters of the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP)
celebrate in Istanbul on 7 June. Photograph: Ozan Kose/AFP/Getty
Images

Snipped

The Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) secured 16.5 percent of the
votes, while the HDP won 13 percent.

About 54 million citizens were eligible to vote in the polls, with 86
percent of attendance rate, according to Turkey's semi-official
Anatolia news agency.

According to the official projections, the AK Party is set to secure
258 MPs, below the 276 seats necessary to form a single-party
government in the 550-seat parliament. The CHP, MHP and HDP are
projected to secure 132, 81 and 79 seats respectively.

'Our march will continue'

The AK Party, which currently has 311 seats in parliament, has ruled
the country with a single-majority government for the last 13 years.

"Our nation’s decision is final. Respecting this is a responsibility
for all political parties," Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in a
public address from AK Party headquarters in Ankara.

"For long marches, 13 years is a short time. There is much more to do.
Our blessed march is to continue … We will evaluate the messages to
get from the polls and we will continue walking in our way with
further determination," he said.

RELATED: Pro-Kurdish party seeks wider reach in Turkish vote

"Turkey’s democracy proved itself. The ones who tried to stain our
democracy are ashamed now."

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Davutoglu had campaigned to
write a new constitution to bolster the powers of the country's
presidential office. The AK Party needed at least 330 seats to
individually initiate such a change and take it to a referendum. All
the other three main parties are against a presidential system.

The HDP, which was contesting the elections on a liberal platform, was
seeking to cross the country's electoral threshold to make its way to
the parliament. The party had independent candidates in the last two
polls that significantly decreased the number of the MPs it won
through Turkey's electoral system.
Turkey elections in one minute

"The ones who are authoritarian and arrogant lost, and the ones who
are in love with the liberty and peace in Turkey won in the polls,"
Selahattin Demirtas, the co-chairperson of the HDP, said in a
televised statement.

"We, the oppressed of Turkey, have beaten a government who used the
state's all facilities against us, to attack us … This is the victory
of the oppressed and alienated in Turkey," he added.

Both HDP and CHP officials said that the debate for a presidential
system ended in Turkey.

Haluk Koc, the CHP spokesman, said that the AK Party became
increasingly authoritarian throughout its 13-year government.

"The country has avoided a one-person dictatorship and a civilian
coup," he said, adding that his party was the key party to form the
new government.

'Voters punished AK Party'

Garo Paylan, a HDP candidate from Istanbul who is likely to make his
way to the parliament, told Al Jazeera that Turkish voters punished
the AK Party's divisive rhetoric.
Listening Post discusses Turkish elections and the future of Turkish journalism

"The results show that the citizens of Turkey have expressed their
support for the HDP's language that has been calling for all the
citizens of Turkey to live together in harmony," Paylan said.

"We want all political parties in Turkey to see this picture and make
their contributions to form a new culture for all citizens of this
country to harmoniously live together. We will work in the parliament
for a new constitution for all people to respectfully live together,"
he told Al Jazeera.

Thousands of Kurds in the country's predominantly Kurdish southeastern
Turkey have celebrated the unofficial results, setting off fireworks
and waving HDP flags.

The political atmosphere was tense in the region before the polls,
with bombings targeting the HDP buildings and rallies.

"The election results are a big success for the HDP as it has moved
from a Kurdish-oriented party to a party that addresses the whole
Turkey. It got votes from liberal voters who previously voted for the
AK Party and CHP and who wanted to block Erdogan and AK Party this
time," Deniz Ulke Aribogan, a professor of political science from
Istanbul Bilgi University, told Al Jazeera.

"The results show that Turkish citizens want Erdogan to act in line
with his position as a neutral president. They don't want to see him
rallying as if he is the leader of the AK Party."

Source: Al Jazeera
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Peace Is Doable

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