Pre-electoral opposition cooperation under democratic erosion: Evidence from Turkey and Hungary

It’s our pleasure to invite you to our next European Studies Unit seminar, „The Making of European Society: Towards a Sociology of European Integration”.
Our guest is Dr. Edgar Şar (Research Affiliate at CEU Democracy Institute), who will present his work “Pre-electoral opposition cooperation under democratic erosion: Evidence from Turkey and Hungary.”
Dr. Bilge Yabanci (Ikerbasque Fellow at the Faculty of Human and Social Science, the University of Deusto in Bilbao) kindly accepted to serve as a discussant). Dr. Edit Zgut-Przybylska will chair the discussion.
Please find the abstract and the speaker’s bio note attached. The seminar will take place on June 11, 11:00-12:30 on zoom.
You can join the discussion on this meeting link: https://zoom.us/j/95701461772?pwd=pZNYXaxWfTW7UTXYSrE5mYbyK3fIcN.1
Please confirm your participation at ezgut@ifispan.edu.pl by June 9.
Abstract
Pre-electoral opposition cooperation under democratic erosion: Evidence from Turkey and Hungary
This paper investigates the dynamics of pre-electoral opposition cooperation under conditions of democratic erosion, focusing on Turkey and Hungary as key cases. While existing literature largely attributes opposition coordination in electoral autocracies to regime vulnerability, this study argues that such explanations fall short in contexts where autocratization unfolds gradually under elected incumbents. Using a longitudinal comparative analysis of eight elections in Turkey and five in Hungary from the early 2010s to the mid-2020s, the study develops an alternative framework highlighting three key drivers of pre-electoral opposition cooperation: electoral rule incentives, the reorientation of political cleavages, and feedback from recent electoral experiences. Findings show that while electoral rules are necessary to trigger cooperation, durable alliances require the emergence of an anti-incumbent cleavage that overshadows intra-opposition divides, reinforced by affirming electoral feedback. The study underscores that pre-electoral cooperation in these contexts is an adaptive and fragile process, shaped by strategic learning amid political uncertainty, and offers broader insights into opposition strategies in autocratizing regimes.
BIO
Edgar Şar is a Co-founder and the current Co-Director of Istanbul Political Research Institute (IstanPol). He received his PhD degree in political science from Boğaziçi University, Istanbul, with this dissertation “Contesting Electoral Authoritarianism: Electoral Strategies of the Political Opposition in Turkey and Hungary” in January 2024. His research interests include (de-)democratization, opposition strategies in authoritarian regimes, secularism and state-society-religion relations, and constitutional law. Dr Şar was previously a CATS Fellow at SWP Berlin, German Institute for International and Security Affairs, and is currently a Research Affiliate at CEU Democracy Institute in Budapest. Having engaged in a wide array of academic and policy-relevant research, projects, and initiatives, Dr Şar regularly appears as political commentator in Turkish media and writes columns on Turkish and international affairs.
Bilge Yabanci is Ikerbasque Fellow at the Faculty of Human and Social Science, the University of Deusto in Bilbao, Spain. She works on autocratization and the role of civil society in such contexts both as facilitator and actor of resistance. She authored Civil Society and Autocratisation: Co-optation, Repression, and Contestation in Turkey (Edinburgh University Press, 2025). Her research has been featured in academic journals, including Government and Opposition, Democratisation, Third World Quarterly, Journal of Civil Society, British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, Politics, Religion & Ideology, and Ethnopolitics, among others.
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