Mardin | |
---|---|
electoral district for the Grand National Assembly of Turkey | |
Province | Mardin |
Electorate | 542.046 |
Current electoral district | |
Created | 1920 |
Seats | 6 Historical
|
MPs | |
Turnout at last election | 82.39% |
DEM Parti | 4 / 6 |
AK Party | 2 / 6 |
Mardin is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects six members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Population reviews of each electoral district are conducted before each general election, which can lead to certain districts being granted a smaller or greater number of parliamentary seats. Mardin's seat allocation has varied little over the last sixty years, keeping around the six seats it has today.
Unelected candidates in small text.
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AK Party | Muammer Güler, Gönül Bekin Şahkulubey, Abdurrahim Akdağ | 103,402 | 32.17 | ||
Independent | Ahmet Türk | 59,350 | 18.52 | ||
Independent | Gülser Yıldırım | 55,505 | 17.32 | ||
Independent | Erol Dora | 51,980 | 16.22 | ||
Independent | Süleyman Bölünmez | 28,746 | 8.97 | ||
CHP | None elected | 11,953 | 3.72 | ||
Büyük Birlik | None elected | 2842 | 0.88 | ||
HAS Party | None elected | 2097 | 0.65 | N/A | |
MHP | None elected | 2041 | 0.64 | ||
Felicity | None elected | 895 | 0.28 | ||
DP | None elected | 845 | 0.26 | ||
DSP | None elected | 658 | 0.20 | [7] | |
TKP | None elected | 474 | 0.15 | ||
Nationalist Conservative | None elected | 240 | 0.07 | ||
Nation | None elected | 234 | 0.07 | ||
Liberal Democrat | None elected | 129 | 0.04 | ||
DYP | None elected | 0 | |||
HEPAR | None elected | 0 | |||
Labour | None elected | 0 | |||
Turnout | 321,391 | 82.39 |
Abbr. | Party | Votes | % | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HDP | Peoples' Democratic Party | 276,920 | 73.3% | |||||
AK Party | Justice and Development Party | 72,645 | 19.2% | |||||
HÜDA-PAR | Free Cause Party | 5,312 | 1.4% | |||||
MHP | Nationalist Movement Party | 4,198 | 1.1% | |||||
CHP | Republican People's Party | 3,736 | 1% | |||||
Other | 15,212 | 4% | ||||||
Total | 378.023 | |||||||
Turnout | 87.30% | |||||||
source: YSK |
Abbr. | Party | Votes | % | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HDP | Peoples' Democratic Party | 258,384 | 68.4% | |||||
AK Party | Justice and Development Party | 107,804 | 28.5% | |||||
CHP | Republican People's Party | 5,087 | 1.3% | |||||
MHP | Nationalist Movement Party | 2,959 | 0.8% | |||||
Other | 3,733 | 1% | ||||||
Total | 377,967 | |||||||
Turnout | 86.53% | |||||||
source: YSK |
Abbr. | Party | Votes | % | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HDP | Peoples' Democratic Party | 233,657 | 60.6% | |||||
AK Party | Justice and Development Party | 113,634 | 29.5% | |||||
CHP | Republican People's Party | 10,915 | 2.8% | |||||
MHP | Nationalist Movement Party | 9,387 | 2.4% | |||||
HÜDA-PAR | Free Cause Party | 8,253 | 2.1% | |||||
IYI | Good Party | 3,952 | 1% | |||||
SP | Felicity Party | 3,151 | 0.8% | |||||
Other | 2,232 | 0.6% | ||||||
Total | 385,281 | |||||||
Turnout | 84.10% | |||||||
source: YSK |
Abbr. | Party | Votes | % | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
YSGP | Party of Greens and the Left Future | 244.036 | 54.4% | |||||
AK Party | Justice and Development Party | 112.572 | 25.1% | |||||
CHP | Republican People's Party | 31.993 | 7.1% | |||||
Independent | 22.340 | 5% | ||||||
MHP | Nationalist Movement Party | 15.572 | 3.5% | |||||
IYI | Good Party | 5.362 | 1.2% | |||||
YRP | New Welfare Party | 5.037 | 1.1% | |||||
Other | 10.243 | 2.3% | ||||||
Total | 448.603 | |||||||
Turnout | 82.76% | |||||||
source: YSK |
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |
---|---|---|---|---|
HDP | Selahattin Demirtaş | 198,542 | 60.90 | |
AK Party | Recep Tayyip Erdoğan | 119,362 | 36.61 | |
Independent | Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu | 8,094 | 2.48 | |
Total votes | 325,998 | 100.00 | ||
Rejected ballots | 3,845 | 1.17 | ||
Turnout | 329,843 | 76.45 | ||
Selahattin Demirtaş win |
The electoral threshold, or election threshold, is the minimum share of all the votes cast that a candidate or political party requires to achieve before they become entitled to representation or additional seats in a legislature. This limit can operate in various ways, e.g. in party-list proportional representation systems where an electoral threshold requires that a party must receive a specified minimum percentage of votes, either nationally or in a particular electoral district, to obtain seats in the legislature. In single transferable voting, the election threshold is called the quota and it is possible to pass it by use of first choice votes alone or by a combination of first choice votes and votes transferred from other candidates based on lower preferences. In mixed-member-proportional (MMP) systems the election threshold determines which parties are eligible for top-up seats in the legislative body.
Kurdish nationalist uprisings have periodically occurred in Turkey, beginning with the Turkish War of Independence and the consequent transition from the Ottoman Empire to the modern Turkish state and continuing to the present day with the current PKK–Turkey conflict.
Emine Ayna, is Turkish Kurd politician She was a member of the former Democratic Society Party (DTP). She joined the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), after the Constitutional Court banned DTP on 11 December 2009.
Selahattin Demirtaş is a Turkish politician, author, political prisoner and former member of the parliament of Turkey. He was the co-leader of the left-wing pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP), serving alongside Figen Yüksekdağ from 2014 to 2018. Selahattin Demirtaş announced that he left politics after the May 2023 elections.
Van is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects eight members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Yalova is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects 3 members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Tekirdağ is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects 6 members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Sakarya is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects 7 members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Siirt is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects three members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Muş is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects four members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Şırnak is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects four members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Şanlıurfa is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects twelve members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Muğla is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects sıx members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Mersin is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects eleven members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Malatya is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects six members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Kütahya is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects five members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
Kars is an electoral district of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey. It elects three members of parliament (deputies) to represent the province of the same name for a four-year term by the D'Hondt method, a party-list proportional representation system.
The electoral system of Turkey varies for general, presidential and local elections that take place in Turkey every five years. Turkey has been a multi-party democracy since 1950, with the first democratic election held on 14 May 1950 leading to the end of the single-party rule established in 1923. The current electoral system for electing Members of Parliament to the Grand National Assembly has a 7% election threshold.
The Thousand Hope Candidates was an electoral alliance between four left-wing political parties in Turkey, formed in preparation for the 2007 general election. The alliance contested the election by fielding candidates from participating parties as independents in order to bypass the 10% election threshold needed to win seats in the Turkish Grand National Assembly. The alliance's candidates won a total of 1,334,518 votes and 22 seats in the election.
The Labour, Democracy and Freedom Bloc was an electoral alliance formed by the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party (BDP) with several other smaller left-wing parties and political movements in Turkey. The alliance contested the 2011 general election by fielding candidates from participating parties as independents in order to bypass the 10% election threshold needed to win seats in the Turkish Grand National Assembly. The alliance won 5.67% of the vote, initially winning 36 MPs. The Supreme Electoral Council of Turkey later annulled the election of BDP MP Hatip Dicle in Diyarbakır, reducing the alliance's elected MPs to 35. The Bloc fielded 65 candidates in 41 provinces.