How populists securitize elections to win them: the 2015 double elections in Turkey

Abstract This study presents a new theoretical framework for understanding one of the ways in which populists generate support in elections. It argues that populist movements securitize elections by triggering perceptions of ontological insecurity among voters. Through this strategy, populist movements amplify voters’ negative image of the country they live in and the challenges they face, which contributes to populist movements’ electoral success. Building upon this theoretical framework, this study offers an explanation for the 2015 double general elections in Turkey. The Justice and Development Party (Adalet ve Kalkınma Partisi, AKP) experienced disappointment after losing its parliamentary majority in the June 2015 elections. However, the AKP increased its votes by 8.6 percent in the November 2015 elections. Between these two elections, the AKP had used the Kurdish question to trigger perceptions of ontological insecurity, which enabled it to securitize the elections in November. This strategy helped the AKP win the November elections.


Introduction
The populist phenomenon has been in ascendance throughout the world, which causes democratic backsliding 1 even in consolidated democracies. When in office, populist movements erode the democratic regime with their Manichean view of society, distaste for checks and balances, and intolerance of dissent. 2 The literature, therefore, requires more research on strategies by which populist movements come is the best strategy for answering the research question. The third section summarizes the historical and political background, as this context is important for any discourse analysis. The findings section includes the comparative analysis of the discourse that the AKP used (1) before the June 2015 elections when the peace process was officially ongoing and (2) between the two general elections in 2015. The study ends with concluding remarks and suggestions for future research.

Populism, ontological security, and securitization
Populism is another contested term in social sciences. It is defined as a thin ideology, which considers society to be divided between two antagonistic groupsthe pure people and the corrupt elite. 5 It is also defined as a political strategy through which a personalistic leader seeks or exercises power by direct, unmediated, and uninstitutionalized support from the people. 6 Others define populism as a political style that grows around a nativistic, personalistic, and culturally folksy pole. 7 Populism has a chameleonic character. 8 It takes a variety of forms, echoing different socio-cultural and cultural contexts. 9 Populist movements, therefore, possess an ideological flexibility allowing them to capitalize on catch-all issues including religion, nationalism, and ethnicity, 10 and to strategically shift their ideology in parallel to their goals. In communicating these ideological shifts to the people, populist movements use discourse, as spoken or written public statements are important in legitimating and animating political action in populist mobilization. 11 Similarly, populist movements frequently use discourse to trigger perceptions of ontological insecurity, 12 enabling them to generate public support.
Ontological security refers to a situation in which there is an absence of anxieties and dangers and when people's identities and autonomy are not in question. 13 It is about one's need "to experience oneself as a whole continuous person in time." 14 Ontological security derives from individuals' reliance on normality and predictability. 15 Ontologically secure individuals have the confidence that they have "in the continuity of their self-identity and in the constancy of the surrounding social and material environment." 16 Routine situations, therefore, constitute the core of ontological security. 17 Where predictability of the routine is ruptured by societal discourses or external threats, the ontologically insecure citizen develops 18 as routine situations are replaced by (perceptions of) critical situations. 19 Hence, ontologically insecure citizens suffer from perceptions of the lack of a safe haven 20 and are constantly in search of one.
Populist movements strategically draw upon people's need for ontological security to generate support in elections. 21 Populist movements frame a situation as a crisis and define it as an existential threat, as crises serve to legitimize populist governance. 22 By promoting a specific interpretation of a threat according to which groups are defined, 23 populist movements use perceived or imagined threats and anxieties that the people experience against their culture, religion, and tradition. 24 Construction of this crisis-setting helps populist movements "amplify voters' negative image of themselves, the country they live in and the challenges they face," which contributes to their electoral success. 25 Where perceptions of threats do not exist, populist movements "perform the crisis" by acting as a trigger for crisis, 26 thereby constructing gaps in people's sense of ontological security.
Election campaigns are unique moments where this populist strategy is crystallized. In their election campaigns, populist movements promote a specific reading of elections, in which each election is represented as a crisis moment at which the public must make a vital decision against some "existential threat." Once the "referent" group accepts this discursive articulation, two developments follow. First, populists' articulation of the opposition takes hold and his/her supporters come to see the opposition candidate as an agent of ontological insecurity. Now, the opposition is not only a political opponent but also part of the enemy threatening the nation. Second, the use of extraordinary measures to prevent a possible victory of the opposition is seen as justified by the populist movement's referent group. This is because the opposition is not simply a political opponent but also an active agent of ontological insecurity, whose very existence threatens the nation.
The result of this populist strategy is the securitization of elections. Securitization constructs the "other" as an existential threat to a referent group, and calls for extraordinary measures to combat this threat. 27 The act of securitization dramatizes an issue as vital and removes it from the sphere of mundane public debate. 28 Securitization also causes the demands, grievances, and agendas of opposition groups to be labeled as seditious, 29 paving the way for the demonization of the opposition. The following examples from the US, Hungary, and Venezuela demonstrate instances in which populist leaders securitized elections by triggering perceptions of ontological insecurity. As these examples demonstrate, populist leaders first define a crisis and then suggest that the elections are a critical turning point for the solution of the crisis. Frequently, a possible success of a political opponent is presented as an alternative scenario in which the crisis would exacerbate and threaten the nation, causing the securitization of the elections.
In his presidential campaign, Trump constructed an image of "America in crisis" to garner support. 30 He demonized irregular migrants with labels such as criminals, rapists, or terrorists, 31 thereby turning them into agents of ontological insecurity. He argued that every day the US border remains open, innocent Americans are killed. 32 Trump suggested that while his opponent, Clinton, was soft on this threat, he would deal with irregular migrants decisively to protect the nation. In a similar vein, before the 2018 elections, Venezuela's Maduro argued that the country was in the midst of an economic war led by the US. 33  mobilizing existing divisions within society and demonizing the opposition, 41 (4) an emphasis on national will and the association of national will with the leader, Erdogan, 42 and (5) mobilization of the masses for political goals. 43 The AKP has used populism to hold on to power while ideological discourses voiced by its leadership demonstrated inconsistencies. 44 It has adopted different ideologies and norms depending on the context and on its political goals. 45 When founded in 2002, the AKP was advertised as a conservative-democratic political party that occupied the center-right of the political spectrum. 46 Advertising itself as a conservative-democrat party enabled the AKP to adapt a thin understanding of Islam and to increase its appeal to the pious and liberal segments of society simultaneously. 47 Therefore, Islamism, which some consider as an internal feature of the AKP, was used instrumentally by the AKP leadership. 48 The AKP has used Islamism to stress the alien nature of the Kemalist elite in domestic politics. 49 The AKP has also used Islam to counter challenges to its grip on power and to create cross-class and cross-ethnicity popular support for its rule. 50 For instance, the AKP drew strong support from conservative Kurds between 2002 and June 2015 by using an Islamic discourse. However, when the peace process between the armed Kurdistan Worker's Party (Partiya Karkeran Kurdistan, PKK) and the Turkish state officially ended in July 2015, the AKP shifted to a new discourse, which prioritized ethno-nationalism.

The Kurdish question
After the foundation of the Republic in 1923, aiming to build a nation-state built upon the ethno-cultural dominance of the Turkish identity, the state elite suppressed other ethnic identities. However, Kurdsunlike non-Muslim minoritieswere considered to be assimilable into a Turkish identity. 51 Thereafter, the state policy was to suppress public manifestations of Kurdish identity and attempt to assimilate Kurds into Turkish identity. 52 The official policy suggested that Kurds were "mountain Turks" who forgot their Turkishness because of the multiethnic structure of the Ottoman Empire. 53 Kurds' cultural and political rights emanating from their identity was denied by the state. 54 Furthermore, the state considered expressions of Kurdish identity as a threat to the nation, resulting in the securitization of the Kurdish question, 55 which also caused successive governments to avoid political means to deal with the issue. This meant the legitimization of the use of extraordinary measures to deal with the issue. 56 The period after the 1980 military coup was important in shaping Kurds' relations to the state. After the coup, the state banned Kurdish in broadcasting, press, and public life. 57 After the start of the armed conflict between the security forces and the PKK, the Turkish state declared a state of emergency in southeast Turkey, which lasted from 1987 to 2002, imposing heavy costs upon Kurds. Enforced disappearances, extrajudicial executions, and torture were commonplace in this period. 58 Between 1980 and 2001, 1,353 people were forcibly disappeared by the security forces and thousands of murders have remained unsolved. 59 The AKP and the Kurdish question Pragmatism, rather than reformism, has defined the AKP's treatment of the Kurds. 60 Before the AKP, the mainstream political parties in Turkey could not develop approaches independent of the dominant security elite (i.e., the military). 61 The AKP, however, tried to convince Kurds that their approach to the Kurdish question would be different from that of previous political parties. The 2002 AKP party program significantly diverged from the security paradigm, which had previously dominated state policy toward the Kurds. This program suggested that security-oriented approaches to the Kurdish question exacerbate the problem. Accordingly, one of the policies that the AKP suggested was an immediate abolishment of the state of emergency that had paralyzed the region since 1987. This program also argued that broadcasting and cultural activities in languages other than Turkish are not harmful to the nation. 62 On the contrary, it would contribute to the solidarity and unity of the nation.
The AKP's approach toward the Kurds was hardly surprising given that its position was fragile due to the threat of the security establishment, which made the search for alliances a necessity for the AKP. The AKP, therefore, followed an agenda that would benefit potential allies such as conservatives, pro-EU circles, business associations, and Kurds. 63 Furthermore, desecuritization of the Kurdish question would weaken the military tutelage over Turkish politics given that the military used its unique position in the fight against the PKK to hold on to political power. 64 Hence, if the AKP were able to desecuritize the Kurdish question, the Kemalist elite would lose a significant cornerstone of its political power. This would provide the AKP with stronger prospects for survival against the Kemalist elite.
The AKP, therefore, was pragmatic in its treatment of the Kurds. Soon after coming to power in 2002, the AKP abolished the state of emergency covering Kurdish-populated cities. When in power, the AKP had continued criticizing the oppressive state tradition of the previous elite, which contributed to its image as a government that was different in terms of ethnic politics. 65 The AKP introduced successive waves of reconciliation projects under different names, such as "Democratic Initiative" (Demokratik Acilim), "National Unity and Solidarity" (Milli Birlik ve Beraberlik), "the Oslo Process," and "the Peace Process." 66 Kurds found these attempts at reconciliation credible, 67 as the AKP was not considered one of the political parties that symbolized the violence and ethnic discrimination of the 1990s.

Methodology
Studying discourse is important because discourses are "institutionalized structures of meaning" that channel political thought and action in certain directions. 68 Political leaders/movements use discourse to persuade the public of the necessity and appropriateness of a course of action. 69 Discourse also allows political leaders/movements to establish a dominant narrative of an issue, setting the parameters of the discussion thereafter. 70 These characteristics of discourse make it an important asset for populist movements, which rely on unmediated communication 71 and public statements 72 rather than formal institutions in their communication with the people. This study focuses on different discourses adopted by the AKP in two periods: the discourse between January 2013 and June 2015 and the discourse between June 2015 and November 2015. A keyword search was conducted for the AKP leadership's speeches and statements to the general public for these dates. As the aim was to find speeches and statements that revealed the AKP discourse about the Kurdish question, the peace process, and the double elections, keywords such as the elections (seçimler, Haziran seçimleri, Kasım seçimleri, önümüzdeki seçimler), the Kurdish question (Kürt sorunu, terör sorunu), the peace process (barış süreci, çözüm süreci), the People's Democracy Party (Halkların Demokrasi Partisi, HDP), and the PKK were used to locate these particular speeches and statements. As a result of this search, fifty-seven speeches and statements by the AKP leadership on the Kurdish question, the peace process, and the elections were retrieved. Forty-four of these speeches belonged to Erdogan. In the final step of the analysis, these speeches and statements were read to determine recurring patterns and themes specific to these two different periods.

Findings
The comparative analysis revealed the triggers that the AKP used to build perceptions of ontological insecurity and to securitize the November 2015 elections. The analysis revealed that the AKP discourse between January 2013 and June 2015 aimed to desecuritize the Kurdish question. Analysis demonstrated that, after the disappointment of the June 2015 elections, the AKP leadership started using a new discourse. The new AKP discourse between the two general elections included four core elements allowing them to build ontological insecurities and securitize the snap elections: (1) prioritization of the existential threats against the nation and resecuritization of the Kurdish question, (2) adoption of Turkish nationalism, (3) demonization of the HDP and equating it with terrorism, and (4) equating the AKP's victory in snap elections to the only way out of "chaos." The peace process: January 2013-June 2015 In December 2012, Erdogan announced that negotiations between the imprisoned PKK leader Öcalan and the Turkish state were ongoing. 73 The symbolic start of the peace process was the Kurdish New Year (Newroz) celebrations on March 21, 2013, when Öcalan's letter on the peace process was read to more than a million people in Diyarbakir. 74 This process was accompanied by the AKP's attempts to desecuritize the Kurdish question. For example, the government urged the establishment of the Committee of the Wise People (Akil İnsanlar Heyeti), which was a sixty-three-person committee whose members had been chosen from among intellectuals, civil society activists, academics, and artists. 75 The mission of this committee was to convince the public of the viability of a peaceful solution to the Kurdish question.
The AKP also used discourse to desecuritize the Kurdish question during the same period. In a well-known speech in 2013, Erdogan argued that: Those claiming that their race, tribe or clan is superior to others are in the same path with the devil. [ : : : ] We are all members of the same nation in the Turkish Republic. In this conceptualization of the nation, there is the Turk; there is the Kurd; there is the Laz; there is the Circassian. [ : : : ] Those promoting ethnic nationalism are in deviance and in malice. They are in sedition. With the permission of God, we are going to be in one in solidarity, alive and strong as we have been for thousands of years. This speech was significant at different levels. First, Erdogan used inclusive language assigning the same level of importance to different ethnic groups in Turkey. This was in contrast to the Republican elite, who emphasized the primacy of Turkish identity over other ethnic identities. 77 Second, Erdogan discredited "ethnic nationalism," which had contributed to the securitization of the Kurdish question in the past. Third, he referred to an Islamic argument, asserting that divisions based on ethnic identities are harmful to the unity of Muslims. According to this argument, the Islamic brotherhood of Muslims (ummah) should prevail over ethnic parochialisms. This demonstrates that during the peace process, Erdogan's inclusive discourse toward the Kurds was based on Islamism. 78 On another occasion, Erdogan built on the same discourse when talking about the peace process: We are the only political party in this country, which would not allow discrimination based on ethnic identities. Kurds, Lazs, Circassians, Georghians, Abhazs, Romans and Pomaks, are my brothers as much as Turks. [ : : : ] In contrast to the CHP [The Republican People's Party (Cumhuriyet Halk Partisi, CHP)], we think that discriminative nationalism is doing unjust to this nation's history. In contrast to the MHP [Nationalist Action Party (Milliyetçi Hareket Partisi)], we will never encourage the kind of nationalism, which is tainted by the language of hatred, anger, division and discrimination. 79 This speech, in addition to rejecting ethnic nationalism in favor of inclusive nationalism, set a tone aiming to differentiate the AKP from the opposition in its approach to the Kurdish question. Erdogan suggested that while the other major political parties promote exclusionary nationalism, the AKP does not prioritize one ethnic group over others. This discourse was part of the strategy suggesting that the AKP is different from previous political parties, which created the Kurdish question. Other leading names of the AKP highlighted the same point about the opposition parties. They blamed the opposition parties for Kurds' problems and argued that these parties aggravated the Kurdish question. A prominent AKP MP argued that: Therefore, during the peace process, the AKP discourse aimed to desecuritize the Kurdish question. The discourse was inclusionary toward the Kurdish ethnic identity and exclusionary toward the opposition, as they were held responsible for the Kurdish question.
The end of the peace process and the snap general elections: June 2015 and November 2015 In December 2014, the pro-Kurdish HDP co-leader, Demirtaş, explained that unlike previous pro-Kurdish parties the HDP candidates would enter the elections under the HDP party ticket instead of as independent candidates. 81 This decision was risky, as (1) there were doubts about the HDP's ability to pass the 10 percent national threshold, and (2) it could alienate the AKP if the HDP were to cause a major decline in the number of AKP MPs in the parliament. 82 Indeed, in the June 2015 elections the AKP won 40.9 percent of the votes, a result that prevented the establishment of an AKP single-party government. This outcome was unexpected for the AKP leadership, as they had anticipated that the peace process would boost their votes among Kurds. The pro-Kurdish HDP garnered 13.1 percent of the votes. Furthermore, the HDP was able to increase its votes not only in predominantly Kurdish cities but also in the metropolises of western Turkey. 83 Only one day after the elections, Deputy Prime Minister Akdogan revealed their discontent with the HDP's role in the AKP's poor standing in the elections. He said: "From this point forward, the HDP can only shoot a movie about the peace process." 84 80 Haber 7, "Metiner'den CHP ve MHP'ye Cok Agir Suclama," May 21, 2013, http://www.haber7.com/ roportaj/haber/1028918-metinerden-chp-ve-mhpye-cok-agir-suclama. 81 Milliyet, "Secime Parti Olarak Girecegiz," December 15, 2014, https://www.milliyet.com.tr/gundem/ secime-parti-olarak-girecegiz-1984367. 82 The electoral system in Turkey is d'Hondt with a 10 percent election threshold. This system provides advantages for larger parties, while smaller parties are in a disadvantageous position. However, unlike with other smaller parties in Turkey, the HDP's vote is concentrated in the southeast and the east of Turkey, allowing the HDP to win a larger number of MPs once passing the threshold. In this scenario, the second largest party in these two regions (i.e., the AKP) would lose seats, which would go to the AKP if the HDP were to enter the elections with independent candidates. 83 Gunay and Yoruk, "Governing Ethnic Unrest." 84 Hürriyet, "Yalcin Akdogan: HDP Bundan Sonra Cozum Surecinin Ancak Filmini Yapar," June 8, 2015, https://www.hurriyet.com.tr/gundem/yalcin-akdogan-hdp-bundan-sonra-cozum-surecinin-ancakfilmini-yapar-29227700.
His statement hinted that the AKP was either planning to exclude the HDP from the peace process or completely close the door on the peace process. Unsurprisingly, the peace process officially ended on July 24, 2015 after the Turkish army bombarded the PKK positions in Qandil Mountain. 85 Research points to several reasons for the failure of the peace process and the resecuritization of the Kurdish question. These include the de-Europeanization of Turkey and its deteriorating relations with the EU, the Syrian civil war and the presence of autonomous Kurdish cantons in northern Syria, the emergence of a new generation of Kurdish politicians who were not willing to support Erdogan's agenda, and the instrumentalization of the peace process by the AKP government. 86 Indeed, a major weakness of the peace process was the fact that the AKP tied the peace process to its success in the elections as well as the Kurdish movement's support for Erdogan's agenda for a presidential system. 87 Erdogan emphasized the importance of a strong incumbent party with 400 MPs 88 to the success of the peace process. 89 When the new generation of Kurdish politicians declined to extend support for his political agenda, 90 Erdogan's attitudes toward the peace process started to change. 91 This is why the HDP's December 2014 declaration that the HDP candidates would enter the elections with the party ticket was an 88 This number would allow the AKP to control over two-thirds of the Turkish parliament. Accordingly, the AKP could change the constitution in line with a presidential system without needing a referendum or the support of opposition parties. 89 Ozpek, "The State's Changing Role"; Milliyet, "Erdogan: 400 Milletvekili Lazim," February 2, 2015, https://www.milliyet.com.tr/siyaset/erdogan-400-milletvekili-lazim-2009741. 90 In March 2017 the HDP co-leader Demirtaş made a speech in which he repeatedly stated, "We will not let you [Erdogan] become the president." While the speech was met with enthusiasm among the opposition, the reaction of the AKP to this statement was swift. Five days after the peace process ended, Deputy Prime Minister Akdogan argued that Demirtaş' statement was an open provocation, which started the downward trend in the peace process. See, Cumhuriyet, "Akdogan itiraf etti: Erdogan tahrik oldu," July 29, 2015. http://www.cumhuriyet.com.tr/haber/akdogan-itiraf-ettierdogan-tahrik-oldu-333227. 91 Weiss, "From Constructive Engagement." important turning point. This claim is also supported by the fact that though the peace process was officially ongoing in 2015, no visible progress was made toward peace after the HDP's declaration of entering the elections on the party ticket. This was despite the fact that a major step was taken toward peace with the Dolmabahçe Consensus. Later, Erdogan even argued that he had never endorsed the Dolmabahçe Consensus, causing great controversy even in his own ranks. While this and the other factors listed above are important for understanding the collapse of the peace process, this study argues that the AKP's desire to reverse their electoral defeat in the June 2015 elections is another factor that needs attention. 92 The outcome of the June 2015 elections revealed the collapse of the AKP's strategy in the elections. 93 Far from obtaining the supermajority that would allow Erdogan to implement his agenda, the AKP lost its majority in the parliament. Not only the HDP but also the ultra-nationalist MHP, which was highly critical of the peace process, increased its votes at the expense of the AKP. Rather than accepting the election results and seeking a coalition government with other political parties in the parliament, the AKP, under Erdogan's guidance, implemented a series of moves to reverse this electoral defeat. First, Erdogan obstructed Prime Minister Davutoglu's attempts to form a coalition government with the CHP or the MHP. 94 Second, he forced snap elections scheduled for November 2015. Third, the AKP leadership triggered perceptions of ontological insecurities, enabling the AKP to securitize the November elections.
As noted earlier, populists, in line with the changing political and social context, shift their discourse strategically. 95 In their discursive engagement with the voters, populists refer to perceived or imagined threats to exploit people's need for ontological security, 96 which in turn increases the electoral support for populists. 97 Where the perception of a threat does not exist, populists 92 Though this study focuses on the AKP's motivation to reverse the outcome of the June 2015 elections in explaining the failure of the peace process, it does not argue that the electoral dimension was the only reason causing the collapse of the peace process. Other factors such as the diminishing of the EU anchor and the spillover from the Syrian war were among the other reasons that contributed to the failure of the peace process. Research, for instance, argued that the emergence of a proto-Kurdish state in northern Syria cast a long shadow on the Turkish state's relations with own Kurdish citizens as well as on the peace process, eventually leading to the collapse of the peace process. For an example such studies, see Weiss, "From Constructive Engagement." 93 Ozpek, "The State's Changing Role." 94 One must note that opposition parties were also polarized among themselves, making the task easier for Erdogan. The MHP rejected any offer that implied cooperation with the HDP. Therefore, a coalition government established by opposition parties was never on the trigger the crisis 98 and perceptions of ontological insecurity. In 2015, Turkish public opinion was already receptive to a shift toward a discourse prioritizing ontological insecurities. Turkey was shaken by three major terrorist attacks perpetrated by the Islamic State (ISIS) in 2015. In June, an ISIS attack at the HDP meeting in Diyarbakir killed five people. In July, another ISIS attack in Suruç killed thirty-three people, who were mostly leftist university students. In the bloodiest terrorist attack in Turkish history, ISIS killed 109 peace protesters in Ankara in October 2015.
In this political and social context, the AKP used the Kurdish question to trigger people's perceptions of ontological insecurity and securitize the elections. The fact that the AKP centered its discourse on the Kurdish question after June 2015, while overlooking the ISIS threat, stemmed from two reasons. First, the conflictual history between Kurds and the Turkish state as well as the forced migration of Kurds caused Turks to establish an exclusionary and antagonistic relationship with Kurds, 99 while the ISIS threat in Turkey did not carry the same historical baggage. Accordingly, the Turkish people were more receptive to a discourse that emphasized the Kurdish question as an existential threat to the nation. Second, the AKP was able to couple the PKK with the HDP in the elections, while the AKP could not implement a similar strategy for the ISIS threat. The Kurdish question, therefore, was more suitable for securitizing the elections because, in its election campaign, the AKP was able to present the HDP as an extension of the PKK.
The AKP officially ended the peace process on July 24, 2015, after it became clear that the peace process did not help the AKP's electoral standing. 100 Thereafter, the new AKP discourse prioritized ethnic nationalism and ontological insecurity triggers, which would allow the AKP to maintain its hegemony. 101 This new discourse aimed to develop a new mode of ethnic nationalism whereby overt hostility against the Kurdish opposition became the major strategy for garnering Turkish nationalist support. 102 The new discourse included four core elements allowing it to build ontological insecurities and then securitize the November elections: (1) prioritization of the existential threats against the nation and resecuritization of the Kurdish question, (2) adoption of Turkish nationalism, (3) demonization of the HDP and equating it with terrorism, and (4) equating the AKP's victory in snap elections with the only way out of the "chaos." While the AKP discourse before the June elections emphasized normalization, a core element of the AKP discourse after the June 2015 elections was the prioritization of the existential threats against the nation and resecuritization of the Kurdish question. In a statement in September 2015, Erdogan argued that those who wanted him to lose did not care about Turkey. He said that nobody should focus on such issues while "Turkey is fighting against the PKK terrorism, DHKP-C terrorism, ISIS threat and the treasons of parallel state organization [Gulenists]." 103 In September 2015, Erdogan and Prime Minister Davutoglu joined a meeting named "One voice against terror." In this meeting, both Erdogan and Davutoglu emphasized the terrorist threats that the nation was facing. 104 The AKP leadership also resecuritized the Kurdish question by prioritizing the armed struggle against the PKK while political solutions were taken off the table. He argued: We are will continue our fight until terrorist organizations are no more threats to our country, until those weapons are laid down and buried. [ : : : ] We will continue our fight until concrete is poured [on weapons] and not one terrorist remains within our borders. [ : : : ] We never considered the peace process as a means to legitimize terrorism or give them elbowroom. [ : : : ] Unfortunately, they [the PKK and the HDP] did not want to understand this. Therefore, the peace process is now in the refrigerator. 105 Public opinion polls demonstrated the success of the new discourse. An IPSOS survey found that while in May 2015 only 14 percent of the Turkish population considered the peace process/terrorism to be the most important problem in Turkey, this figure increased to 47 percent in August 2015 and a staggering 72 percent in September 2015. 106 One should note that the increase in the percentage of people considering the peace process/terrorism to be the most important problem occurred before the October 2015 bombings in Ankarathe biggest terrorist attack in Turkish history. This increase also occurred before the start of trench warfare between the state security forces and the PKK, which heavily affected Kurdish-populated cities in Turkey. Therefore, the new AKP discourse had started to shape public opinion in Turkey well before these bloody events.
The second element of the new discourse was the adoption of a nationalist discourse. 107 To get nationalist support, the AKP leadership followed a more nationalist and militarist agenda. 108 Tugrul Türkeş, an MP from the ultranationalist MHP, was invited to be a minister in the interim government in August 2015, and later resigned from the MHP to join the AKP ranks. 109 Erdogan also adopted a nationalist terminology in the course of the campaign for the snap elections. On several occasions he asked the people to send "550 native and national MPs to the parliament." 110  In another speech, Erdogan argued that the nation was threatened by terrorism. He argued that the nation would neutralize these threats by uniting around the principle of "one nation, one flag, one homeland, and one state." 112 The third core element of the AKP discourse was the demonization of the HDP and equating it with the PKK. In one of his speeches, while referring to the HDP, Erdogan asked: In another speech in October 2015, Erdogan argued: Those who talk about peace when they go to the west are the same people who bomb the hospital in Şemdinli, police stations, mosques, and the airport. On the one hand, you talk about peace and on the other hand, you terrorize everywhere in collaboration with the PKK, which you [the HDP] rely on. I address my nation and the people of the region [Kurdish-populated cities], if you are not going to teach a lesson to those [the HDP] who rely on the terrorist organization in 1 November elections, when are you going to teach them a lesson? 114 This element of the new discourse enabled the AKP to delegitimize the HDP as a legal actor of Turkish politics. It created an atmosphere in which the HDP, which was presented as an extension of the PKK, was equated with terrorism. A possible HDP success in the November elections was presented as a source of ontological insecurity for the Turkish people. An AKP MP manifested this feeling in the following words: "I think if the HDP passes the threshold or gets 14-15% as claimed, it will cause more violence." 115 Hence, the November elections were securitized, as the possible success of the HDP was displayed as a "security threat" and defeating the HDP (thereby, the PKK) was tied to the outcome of this election. 116 The last element of the AKP discourse was to equate the success of the AKP in the snap general elections with the only way out of chaos. The campaign slogan for the November 2015 elections was "We are walking towards stability." Accordingly, themes such as stability, tranquility, and "the way out of chaos" were repeatedly emphasized throughout the campaign. It was argued that only the AKP single-party government could deliver these public goods, whereas other election outcomes would only exacerbate the security situation in Turkey. Prime Minister Davutoglu argued that: This element of the discourse was widely circulated at the local level by AKP representatives. For instance, the AKP candidate in Van argued that: One cannot talk about stability, tranquility and peace where the AKP does not exist [ : : : ] When there is the AKP, there is tranquility, stability, and peace. Think about the opposite. There is none of these without the AKP. 118 This core element of the new discourse signaled to the citizens that only the AKP single-party government could end the people's ontological insecurities. While the opposition parties and coalition governments were associated with instability, terrorism, and lack of a resolve to fight existential threats, it was argued that the AKP had the determination and power to bring about stability and end all existential threats, which were caused by the loss of the AKP single-party government in the June 2015 elections.

Conclusion
Populist movements thrive in extraordinary times. They use perceptions of crisis to convince the people that their message is important and urgent. 119 They "perform the crisis" 120 to inculcate a perception of an existential threatto go beyond the limits of mundane politics and convince their audience to vote for them. A particular strategy to go beyond mundane politics is creating perceptions of ontological insecurity that would lead to the securitization of the elections. This study suggested that one of the reasons for the AKP's ability to reverse the election results in less than five months was its ability to create perceptions of ontological insecurity and to securitize the elections by building upon people's ontological insecurity perceptions.
This study argued that the AKP's deliberate decision to use a new discourse enabled it to recover its losses in the November 2015 elections. The new discourse triggered perceptions of ontological insecurity by prioritizing threats against the nation and resecuritizing the Kurdish question. The HDP was portrayed as an extension of the PKK and an agent of ontological insecurity in the elections. The new discourse, therefore, securitized the snap general elections by equating the pro-Kurdish HDP with the PKK. Thereafter, the November 2015 elections were presented as extraordinary elections that could have dire consequences for the nation if the AKP were not victorious. This strategy worked well. In the words of a voter who shifted 118 IHA, "Ebubekir Kacmaz: AK Parti Iktidar Olmazsa Istikrar Olmaz," October 20, 2015, https://www.iha.
com.tr/haber-ebubekir-kacmaz-ak-parti-iktidar-olmazsa-istikrar-olmaz-504976/. 119 Taggart, "Populism and Representative Politics." 120 Moffitt, "How to Perform." her vote to the AKP in the snap elections, "If I had voted for another party, this party would not have showed a governing style as stable as that of Erdogan. I thought that other parties could not resolve the terror problem. The AKP did show stability for coping with terror." 121 While this study focused on the Turkish case, there are lessons for other countries. For populist movements, every election is an opportunity to promote perceptions of threat that allegedly require immediate and extraordinary action. Trump's 2016 campaign in the US and the Johnson campaign in the UK in 2019 demonstrated how populists promote perceptions of urgency (e.g., "Get Brexit Done") and refer to existential threats (e.g., migrants are rapists) to convince constituents that these elections are extraordinary elections requiring voters to make some crucial decisions. In other words, populist movements securitize elections by referring to elements that "threaten the nation" and require "decisive and extraordinary" action, which only the populist leader can deliver. These strategies, while benefiting populist movements, harm democracy, as securitization obstructs a meaningful discussion of political issues. Accordingly, one particular task awaiting proponents of democracy is to develop strategies that could prevent populist movements from hijacking the political agenda in general and the mainstream media in particular. This topic, however, is beyond the scope of this study and could be the focus of future studies.