BEHIND THE LINES: In more than two decades of rule, Erdogan has proved adept at neutralizing rival sources and contenders for power.
Both Israel and Turkey are growing in their strategic power, and they recognize how this new politics – which is not just post-Cold War, but also part of a shifting world order – works.
Here is a guide to Turkey's runoff election, the two candidates and the key issues as well as details on how the May 14 parliamentary election unfolded.
The election had been seen as one of the most consequential yet for Turkey, with the opposition believing it had a strong chance of unseating Erdogan.
MIDDLE ISRAEL: The attempt to herald a neo-Ottoman renaissance produced an Ottoman tragedy.
Concern in Israel’s pro-democracy camp that democratic erosion processes in Turkey are similarly emerging in Israel under Netanyahu’s enduring rule.
A weekly selection of opinions and analyses from the Arab media around the world.
Nationwide, the Islamist-rooted AKP won a new parliamentary majority with its alliance partners, while Erdogan, 69, led comfortably in the presidential vote ahead of a runoff.
Erdogan received 49.4% of votes in the Turkish presidential election. Rival Kilicdaroglu had 44.96%.
Regardless of how the final vote count turns out and the likelihood of Ankara heading to a second round of elections, the opposition has an uphill battle.