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tepav@tepav.org.tr / tepav.org.trTEPAV veriye dayalı analiz yaparak politika tasarım sürecine katkı sağlayan, akademik etik ve kaliteden ödün vermeyen, kar amacı gütmeyen, partizan olmayan bir araştırma kuruluşudur.
The prime minister of Malaysia, Najib Razzak, was recently in Turkey.  The two countries signed a Free Trade Agreement (FTA). As I was  listening to Razzak talking about the agreement, I started thinking  about the similarities and dissimilarities between the two countries.  Turkey and Malaysia appear similar, but they are not at all. Let me  explain.  
First, Turkey and Malaysia are predominantly Muslim  countries; around 60% of Malaysians and 99% of Turks are Muslims.  However, ethnicity and religion coincides in the case of Malaysia, as  Malays are Muslims. There is no such one-to-one correspondence between  ethnicity and religion in Turkey. That is a big difference, if you ask  me. Second, both countries are considered examples of moderation in  Islam. Similar? No. Turkey has a Civil Code, but Malaysia is not there  yet. Presumably, their moderation is due to the limited number of Malays  and the fact that the remainder of Malaysia’s population is composed of  strong civilizations, such as the Chinese – that’s another difference. 
Third,  the ballot box seems to be doing its job, in Malaysia since 1957, and  1946 in Turkey. That similarity also doesn’t survive closer scrutiny.  Since 1957, Malaysia has been run more or less by the same political  party. It used to be called “Alliance” and is currently a coalition  under the name of Barison Nasional (National Front). The BN has been  Malaysia’s federal ruling party since its independence. That means the  ballot box has not lead to change in Malaysia, but Turkey is a different  story. If you try to count off the number of parties that have shared  power one way or another since 1946 in Turkey, one hand will not be  enough. Political change through the ballot box happened in Turkey, but  not in Malaysia. Why, you may wonder?
Could the coincidence of ethnicity and religion be one reason? In Turkey, 65% of the population is composed of Sunni Turks, yet there has been political change. In Malaysia, 60% are Malays  and Muslims, but there has been no political change. Why is that so? It  might be the first-past-the-post voting system that they have in  Malaysia. The system was designed to limit the power of urban areas  against the rural ones. On top of that, now, with creative  redistricting, the country’s rural inhabitants that constitute 30% of  the total population determine 80% of the MPs in Parliament. The result  is discontent, especially after the 2013 elections. In 2013, 5.8 million  voters wanted a change in the government, while around 5.2 million  preferred to preserve the status quo. It is obvious that 5.8 is greater  than 5.2, however, due to the creative redistricting, the 5.2 million  were awarded with 133 seats, while the 5.8 million who voted for change  received only 89 seats. That is gerrymandering for you. Up until now, we  have not had this level of obvious gerrymandering in Turkey. Creative  redistricting should not be allowed to delegitimize the electoral  process and the ballot box. That is the reason why the ballot box was  not able to bring political change in Malaysia and frustrates people.  Those are my fourth and fifth points for you.
Nowadays, Turkey is  starting to discuss an electoral system reform. Why? Simple. 43% may  not be enough to form a majority government.
This commentary was published in Hürriyet Daily News on 26.04.2014