Centre Party (Turkey)

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Centre Party
Merkez Parti
Leader Abdurrahim Karslı
Slogan "Me" and "them" will end, it will be "us"!
Founded June 2, 2014 (2014-06-02)
Preceded by People's Voice Movement
Headquarters Ankara
Ideology Liberalism
Euroscepticism
Anti-establishment
Political position Centre to Centre-right[1]
Colours              Turquoise, blue and orange
Parliament:
0 / 550
Website
official website
Politics of Turkey
Political parties
Elections

The Centre Party (Turkish: Merkez Parti) is a political party in Turkey formed on 2 June 2014 by Abdurrahim Karslı. The party was the result of the politicisation of the People's Voice Movement, with attempts to create a political party initially beginning in 2011. The party is claims to be liberal, but has been accused of being affiliated with exiled cleric Fethullah Gülen. Despite Karslı's claims that up to 15 smaller political parties were thinking of merging with the party amongst talk of MP defections, it currently has no seats in the National Assembly, after it received 0.05% of the vote in the June 2015 election and did not contest the subsequent November 2015 election. It was previously represented by a single member in the parliament; Ercan Cengiz who resigned from the Republican People's Party (CHP) on 25 January 2015.[2]

The party's membership is formed by politicians formerly of other parties such as the Motherland Party, the Nationalist Movement Party and the Democratic Left Party. Parties allegedly due to join the Centre Party are the Turkish Change Movement founded by CHP member Mustafa Sarıgül.

The party's economic policy is based on independence from the International Monetary Fund, the simplification of the tax system and the elimination of poverty. The party is strongly against Turkey's accession to the European Union, claiming that the EU has failed to assist Turkey in fighting the PKK separatist organisation. On the Cypriot issue, the party believes that the Republic of Cyprus and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus can co-exist peacefully as two independent states.[3]

References