Nov 1 elections: A sad picture for women

The losers of the Nov. 1 elections were again women. According to unofficial figures, the Justice and Development Party (AKP) has 34 women deputies, while the Republican People's Party (CHP) has 21, the Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) has 23 and the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) has three, equaling 81 women deputies in total.

In this case, there was a fall in the number of women deputies in all parties except the CHP. In the June elections, the AKP had 41 woman deputies in parliament; now they have 34. The number of woman deputies from the HDP fell from 32 to 23 and in the MHP, from four to three. 

In the June elections, 98 women were able to become members of parliament corresponding to 17.6 percent; now this rate has gone down to 14.7 percent.

As a result, the picture that has emerged is sad for women. 

Turkey has one of the worst scores in terms of women representatives in politics. The latest elections were also a fiasco for women organizations which have been working for gender equality for years.

KaDer, a group which works for women to be elected for parliament regardless of their party affiliation, interpreted the fall in the number of women in parliament as "different dynamics." KaDer head Gönül Karahano?lu said, "We did not launch a campaign for women candidates for the Nov. 1 elections as we did in other elections because of the bloody attacks in Suruç and Ankara and because it did not look right to focus on women candidates in the violence spiral the country was going through." 

During the extraordinarily tense periods following the June elections political parties forgot women in their election campaigns. As Karahano?lu said, none of the parties included gender equality in their election propaganda...

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