RIP Turkey
- fightinfrenchman
- Ninja
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RIP Turkey
Dromedary Scone Mix is not Alone Mix
Re: RIP Turkey
tbh I would be surprised if that referendum wasn't rigged
Re: RIP Turkey
I read what they were actually changing and in a sense it's just moving closer to what the american democracy is compared to many european democracies. It's blown up by media tbh.
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- Ninja
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Re: RIP Turkey
i doubt it. it's like saying putin isnt a dictator lol. he's clearly usurping more and more power.
The President becomes both the head of state and head of government, with the power to appoint and sack ministers and VP. The president can issue decrees about executive. If legislation makes a law about the same topic that President issued an executive order, decree will become invalid and parliamentary law become valid.
Adaptation of several articles of the constitution with other changes, mainly transferring executive powers of cabinet to President
Re: RIP Turkey
umeu wrote:i doubt it. it's like saying putin isnt a dictator lol. he's clearly usurping more and more power.The President becomes both the head of state and head of government, with the power to appoint and sack ministers and VP. The president can issue decrees about executive. If legislation makes a law about the same topic that President issued an executive order, decree will become invalid and parliamentary law become valid.Adaptation of several articles of the constitution with other changes, mainly transferring executive powers of cabinet to President
Especially as a german I am veeeery cautious and suspicious about those kind of decrees, europe experienced this more than one time. It's awfully similar to the "Ermächtigungsgesetz" in 1933
Re: RIP Turkey
The president can issue decrees about executive. If legislation makes a law about the same topic that President issued an executive order, decree will become invalid and parliamentary law become valid.
In the US, the president can issue executive orders but he cannot really bypass the Congress on the most important issues, on which laws need to be enacted.
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- Ninja
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Re: RIP Turkey
jesus3 wrote:umeu wrote:i doubt it. it's like saying putin isnt a dictator lol. he's clearly usurping more and more power.The President becomes both the head of state and head of government, with the power to appoint and sack ministers and VP. The president can issue decrees about executive. If legislation makes a law about the same topic that President issued an executive order, decree will become invalid and parliamentary law become valid.Adaptation of several articles of the constitution with other changes, mainly transferring executive powers of cabinet to President
Especially as a german I am veeeery cautious and suspicious about those kind of decrees, europe experienced this more than one time. It's awfully similar to the "Ermächtigungsgesetz" in 1933
yea it is.
he's moving power with him as he changes function. the prime minister was previously the most powerful in the country, and the president was mostly ceremonial, when he no longer could be PM, he made sure he became president, and now he changed the presidency into the leader of the country, instead of the PM. in that sense, it's indeed becoming more american style, but saying it as if its a small and insignificant change is really understating it. Hitler indeed did something similar, transforming the mostly unimportant and ceremonial function of chancellor into the most important function of the state.
Re: RIP Turkey
I live in Turkey, it's really close and still arguable in law, there are some techinal problems yet it is practically done. Before Turkey was already done with governement, even with nay i dont think it would be better. This law only justificies the current situation. Rest in Peace, i want to live in abroad: my school had IB programme damn why i didn't join it :(
- Laurence Drake
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Re: RIP Turkey
HUMMAN wrote:I live in Turkey, it's really close and still arguable in law, there are some techinal problems yet it is practically done. Before Turkey was already done with governement, even with nay i dont think it would be better. This law only justificies the current situation. Rest in Peace, i want to live in abroad: my school had IB programme damn why i didn't join it :(
careful what you say, Erdogan might accuse you of being a Gulenist!
Top quality poster.
Re: RIP Turkey
Laurence Drake wrote:careful what you say, Erdogan might accuse you of being a Gulenist!
Thanks for your advice dude, but it is not that strict, it is true governement creates a "party country" which pritiorites their ideology in state instutions. Yet opposition is still respected by law and practically avaible in internet and limitedly on TV. So i'm still safe. Turkey is gonna be like Russia. Authoritarian, not dictatorial. (at least i hope so)
Re: RIP Turkey
This is kind of similar to Brexit, in political terms: a very narrow majority makes a major change in the system, which ties everyone's fate for the foreseeable future.
There is one common thing though between the two: they are both a result of this new-found, inward-looking nationalism, basically a knee-jerk reaction to the uncertainty coming from global politics and economics. There is a trend in politics right now of devolution of power from a remote/abstract source of power to closer, local sources of power. It actually has to do with people's psyche refusing to accept external, political authority as much as they did in the past. It's a crisis of leadership, the very bases of what makes people listen to leaders are being put to test.
You might think "but right now the strong leaders paradigm is being reinforced, as more people are electing authoritarian leaders". I think this is a transitional phase and we'll see further deterioration in trust in any leaders at all, then next in line will be institutions. It very much depends on how successful these authoritarian/populistic leaders will be. If they are successful, things might stabilise at this level, if not they may progress to institutions too.
There is one common thing though between the two: they are both a result of this new-found, inward-looking nationalism, basically a knee-jerk reaction to the uncertainty coming from global politics and economics. There is a trend in politics right now of devolution of power from a remote/abstract source of power to closer, local sources of power. It actually has to do with people's psyche refusing to accept external, political authority as much as they did in the past. It's a crisis of leadership, the very bases of what makes people listen to leaders are being put to test.
You might think "but right now the strong leaders paradigm is being reinforced, as more people are electing authoritarian leaders". I think this is a transitional phase and we'll see further deterioration in trust in any leaders at all, then next in line will be institutions. It very much depends on how successful these authoritarian/populistic leaders will be. If they are successful, things might stabilise at this level, if not they may progress to institutions too.
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- Ninja
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Re: RIP Turkey
ye its strange that its not a 67% or even 76% majority required for this change, since its changing the constitution.
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