
Photographer: David Lombeida/Bloomberg
Erdogan’s Most Faithful Followers Reconsider Loyalties as Turkey Election Looms
Delayed disaster relief has fomented anger in areas hardest hit by two devastating earthquakes.
For years, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan was politically untouchable in Turkey’s religious and largely rural southeast, winning two-thirds of the ballots cast here in the 2018 election. Drawing on his roots in an Islamic political movement, Erdogan gave voice — and cheap loans — to the region’s “pious generation,” an underclass of Islamic conservatives who offered him support in exchange for a path to prosperity.
Then, on Feb. 6, two massive earthquakes devastated the southeast, killing more than 50,000 people and prompting an estimated 3.5 million more to flee. As scenes of leveled apartment buildings and people screaming for government help dominated screens, Erdogan’s government struggled to respond to the tragedy.