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Felicity Party

Ultraconservative political party in Turkey


Summary

Ultraconservative political party in Turkey

FieldValue
native_nameSaadet Partisi
native_name_langtr
logoSaadet Partisi Kare Logo.svg
logo_size100px
colorcode
leaderMahmut Arıkan
general_secretaryMesut Doğan
founderNecmettin Erbakan
Recai Kutan
abbreviationSAADET (official)
SP (unofficial)
spokespersonBirol Aydın
foundation
ideologyConservatism
Religious conservatism
Religious nationalism
Millî Görüş
Islamism
newspaperMillî Gazete
headquartersZiyabey Cad. 2. Sk. No: 15, Altındağ, Ankara, Turkey
website
countryTurkey
positionRight-wing
splitVirtue Party
coloursRed (official)
Hot pink (customary)
nationalNation Alliance (2018–2023)
Felicity and Future Alliance (2023–2025)
New Path (2025–present)
youth_wingGenç Saadet
membership_year2025
womens_wingSaadet Kadın Kolları
membership232,928
seats1_titleGrand National Assembly
seats1
seats4_titleDistrict municipalities
seats4
seats5_titleBelde Municipalities
seats5
seats7_titleMunicipal Assemblies
seats7
flag[[File:Flag of the Felicity Party.svg200pxborderFlag of the Felicity Party]]

Recai Kutan SP (unofficial) Religious conservatism Religious nationalism Millî Görüş Islamism Hot pink (customary) Felicity and Future Alliance (2023–2025) New Path (2025–present)

The Felicity Party (, SAADET) is an Islamist Turkish political party. It was founded in 2001, and is mainly supported by conservative Muslims in Turkey.

It was founded on 20 July 2001 after the Virtue Party (FP) was banned by the Constitutional Court. While the party's reformist wing formed the Justice and Development Party (AKP), the hardliners founded the Felicity Party. Although an Islamist party, its policy platform covers the whole span of political issues in Turkey.

The Felicity Party's vote has been weakened by the success of the moderately Islamist AKP government. It has repeatedly condemned the Turkish government's aspiration to join the European Union, and relationship with Israel and the United States. It has argued that Turkey must adapt its military and foreign policy stance to meet what it argues are increasing threats coming from the West to all Islamic countries. The Party's platform is based on Necmettin Erbakan's ideas and philosophy, known as Millî Görüş.

History

The Felicity Party has not been particularly successful electorally, polling just 2.5% of the vote in the 2002 general elections, thereby failing to pass the 10% threshold necessary to gain representation in the Turkish Grand National Assembly. It was slightly more successful in the local elections of 29 March 2004, winning 4.1% of the vote and a number of mayoralties, although none of any particular significance. In the 2011 election they were reduced to 1.24% on the vote. During the period, Recai Kutan (20 July 2001 – 11 May 2003 and again 30 January 2004 – 29 March 2008), Necmettin Erbakan (11 May 2003 – 30 January 2004 and again from 17 October 2010 till his death on 27 February 2011) and Numan Kurtulmuş (26 October 2008 – 1 October 2010) were leaders. In June 2015 elections it won 2.06% of the votes.

National Alliance

In preparation for the June 2015 general election, the Felicity Party stated that it was open to negotiate an electoral alliance with other parties such as the Great Union Party (BBP) and the larger Nationalist Movement Party (MHP). Although the MHP later announced that it was not willing to form an electoral alliance, the Felicity Party (SP) and BBP agreed upon a new alliance in order to increase their chances of surpassing the election threshold of 10% to gain representation in Parliament. The new alliance was named the National Alliance (Millî İttifak).

The Nation and Justice Party (MİLAD) also expressed their intention to join the alliance, but when they were only given top spots on the candidate lists in only 4 electoral districts, MİLAD withdrew and was unable to contest the election for not sending their own party lists to the Supreme Electoral Council on time.

The candidate lists were drawn up such that BBP candidates were placed top in electoral districts in which they won more votes than the SP in 2011, while SP candidates were placed top in provinces in which the SP had beaten the BBP in 2011. This meant that an SP candidate was placed first in 55 provinces, while a BBP candidate was placed first in 30. The remaining positions subsequently alternated between SP and BBP candidates. SP leader Mustafa Kamalak was selected as the first candidate for İstanbul's 1st electoral district while BBP leader Mustafa Destici was selected as the first candidate for Ankara's 2nd electoral district.

Nation Alliance

The party participated in the Nation Alliance in the 2018 general elections with the Republican People's Party (CHP), Good Party (İYİ), and Democrat Party (DP).

In 2022, the party took part in the establishment of the Table of Six. It received 10 deputies from CHP's list in the 2023 parliamentary election, and supported Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu's candidacy in the 2023 presidential election.

Since 2023

On July 6, 2023, SP and the Future Party formed a parliamentary group under SP's banner, and competed in the 2024 local election in an electoral alliance. Saadet received 1.09%, and Gelecek 0.07%, of the electorate.

Political positions

The Felicity Party works both as a political party and an enormous social organization. It has party branches in nearly every district, small town and city in the country.

In the past, it has organized demonstrations on a wide range of issues, often involving tens of thousands of participants. Thousands of protesters joined SP organized demonstrations against the 2004 attack on Fallujah, against the cartoons of Muhammad in newspapers around the world, and Israel's invasion of Gaza during the 2008–2009 Israel–Gaza conflict. SP has criticized the Trump administration over attacks against Iranian forces, and condemned both the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi and the assassination of Qasem Soleimani.

SP has been accused by Arab and pro-government commentators of pursuing pro-Iranian views due to former SP leader Mustafa Kamalak's comments and visits to Iran.

Party leaders

#Leader
(Birth–Death)PortraitTook officeLeft office
1Recai Kutan
(1930–2024)[[File:Recai Kutan 2009 crop.jpg75px]]20 July 200111 May 2003
2Necmettin Erbakan
(1926–2011)[[File:Necmettin Erbakan.jpg75px]]11 May 200330 January 2004
(1)Recai Kutan
(1930–2024)[[File:Recai Kutan 2009 crop.jpg75px]]8 April 2006
(acting from 30 January 2004)26 October 2008
3Numan Kurtulmuş
(1959–)[[File:Nkurtusmus kongre 2010.jpg75px]]26 October 200817 October 2010
(2)Necmettin Erbakan
(1926–2011)[[File:Necmettin Erbakan.jpg75px]]17 October 201027 February 2011
4Mustafa Kamalak
(1948–)[[File:MustafaKamalak.png75px]]5 March 201130 October 2016
5Temel Karamollaoğlu
(1941–)[[File:Temel-Karamollaoğlu (cropped).jpg94x94px]]30 October 201627 November 2024
6Mahmut Arıkan
(1977–)[[File:Mahmut Arıkan 2023.jpg94x94px]]27 November 2024Incumbent

Election results

Parliamentary elections

YearLeaderVotes%Seats+/-Position200220072011June 2015November 201520182023
Recai Kutan785,4892.49 (#8)
820,2892.34 (#6)0
Mustafa Kamalak543,4541.27 (#4)0
949,1782.06 (#5)0
325,9780.68 (#5)0
Temel Karamollaoğlu672,1391.34 (#6)2
Ran on CHP list8

Notes

References

References

  1. Fraser, Suzan. (6 March 2023). "Alliance picks main opposition leader to run against Erdogan". The Associated Press.
  2. Buyuk, Hamdi. (18 May 2023). "Turkey’s New Parliament: More Parties and More Women". Balkan Insight.
  3. (2 May 2018). "Turkish opposition parties to sign four-way election alliance". Middle East Eye.
  4. (7 June 2018). "Q & A: Turkey’s Elections". Human Rights Watch.
  5. (2016). "Regime Change in Contemporary Turkey: Politics, Rights, Mimesis". [[Edinburgh University Press]].
  6. Cook, Steven. (14 April 2023). "What if Kemal Kilicdaroglu Wins Turkey’s Election?". Foreign Policy.
  7. (2023-03-27). "Erdogan verliert vor der Türkei-Wahl den ersten Bündnis-Partner".
  8. (2018). "Governing Islam Abroad: Turkish and Moroccan Muslims in Western Europe". [[Springer Science+Business Media.
  9. (2023). "Voices from Turkish Politics: A Conversation with Temel Karamollaoğlu".
  10. Soylu, Ragip. (4 May 2023). "Turkey elections: Can the opposition stay together if they win?". Middle East Eye.
  11. Aslı, Hürcan. (29 March 2021). "What lies behind Turkey’s withdrawal from the Istanbul Convention?".
  12. (13 August 2023). "Opposition Felicity and Future parties to form alliance for upcoming local elections".
  13. "Saadet Partisi". [[Court of Cassation (Turkey).
  14. (October 18, 2010). "84-year-old Erbakan elected Felicity Party leader". [[Today's Zaman]].
  15. "SP-BBP işbirliğinin ismi belli oldu: Millî İttifak-İzmir Haberleri".
  16. Şafak, Yeni. (April 12, 2015). "İşte SP-BBP ittifakının aday listesi".
  17. (2018-05-04). "Seçim 2018: Muhalefetin kurduğu Millet İttifakı nasıl işleyecek?". BBC News Türkçe.
  18. "Altı Siyasi Parti Genel Başkanının Ortak Açıklaması".
  19. Solaker, Gülsen. (7 July 2023). "Gelecek ve Saadet Partisi Meclis'te ortak grup kurdu". Deutsche Welle.
  20. "Karamollaoğlu ve Davutoğlu Meclis kulisinde vekillerle bir araya geldi".
  21. (2018-10-20). "Saadet Partisi Genel Başkanı Karamollaoğlu: Kaşıkçı'nın ölümünü nasıl izah edecekler".
  22. (2020-01-10). "Saadet Partisi Genel Başkanı Karamollaoğlu: Trump'ın dengesiz gidişatı Amerika için tehlike".
  23. (2020-01-04). "Temel Karamollaoğlu'na göre Kasım Süleymani şehit oldu".
  24. (2023-02-17). "حزب السعادة التركي".
  25. (2023-03-13). "Cübbeli'den Saadet Partisi ile Kılıçdaroğlu arasında İran bağlantısı".
  26. (2023-01-11). "Eski Saadet Partisi Genel Başkanı Kamalak: Esad'la görüştük diye bize tepki gösterenler ABD'nin ağzıyla konuşuyordu".
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