Turks are at a historic turning point, facing dramatically different visions of their country.
Turkish voters are faced with a momentous choice which will affect their country's political and economic futureTurks are at a historic turning point - choosing between two front-runners for the presidency offering dramatically different paths for their country's future.
The president accuses his opponents of being "pro-LGBT", while his Islamist-rooted party positions itself as on the side of the family.Since 2017, Mr Erdogan has run Turkey with sweeping presidential powers, from a vast palace in Ankara. As executive president he can declare a state of emergency and can pick or dismiss civil servants.
Mr Kilicdaroglu says he would roll Turkey back to having parliament and a prime minister in charge, and revive independent courts and a free press. "I will serve all 85 million citizens of Turkey. I will show respect for each of you," he has promised.President Erdogan acquired sweeping executive powers in the aftermath of the botched coup against him in 2016
He advocates a multilateral stance, viewing Turkey as "an island of peace and security", and offering Ankara as a mediator in the Russian war in Ukraine. The early Erdogan years were a byword for strong economic growth and enormous construction projects. And Turkey always stuck closely to the terms of its loan agreements with the IMF.
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