Blood gambit: how autocratizing populists fuel ethnic conflict to reverse election setbacks – evidence from Turkey and Israel

Main author: Akkoyunlu, Karabekir
Other authors: Sarfati, Yusuf
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-42378
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description Through a comparative study of Turkey and Israel, this article highlights a specific strategy that autocratizing populist incumbents in ethnically divided societies utilize when they face election setbacks. A “blood gambit” entails fomenting violent conflict to keep the opposition divided along identitarian cleavages, while creating a rally-around-the-flag effect to help the incumbent win a renewed election. After failing to secure a parliamentary majority in June 2015, Erdoğan ended the Kurdish peace process and engineered repeat elections amidst heightened nationalist fervour and renewed conflict with the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). These elections gave the Justice and Development Party (AKP) a majority and marked the beginning of its alliance with the ultranationalists. Following Israel’s March 2021 elections, Netanyahu increased state repression of Palestinians, which triggered interethnic violence and renewed confrontation with Hamas. The violence threw a wrench into coalition-building efforts between ideologically and ethnically diverse opposition parties. The comparison of Israel and Turkey as two countries with different majority religions, ethnic compositions and socioeconomic levels shows that “blood gambit” is not a parochial strategy. Our analysis also demonstrates that the outcomes of these strategies are shaped by differing institutional and political contexts, in particular, the extent of executive aggrandizement and the level of party fragmentation.
format Journal Article
author Akkoyunlu, Karabekir
author_facet Akkoyunlu, Karabekir
Sarfati, Yusuf
authorStr Akkoyunlu, Karabekir
author_letter Akkoyunlu, Karabekir
author2 Sarfati, Yusuf
author2Str Sarfati, Yusuf
title Blood gambit: how autocratizing populists fuel ethnic conflict to reverse election setbacks – evidence from Turkey and Israel
publisher Taylor and Francis
publishDate 2024
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/42378/