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First presidential decree to be issued Monday, new cabinet to convene Friday, Erdoğan says

Addressing the parliamentary group of his ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) on Saturday, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said the first presidential decree would be issued Monday.

Daily Sabah TÜRKIYE
Published July 07,2018
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The first presidential decree will be issued Monday, President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan said Saturday, adding that the new cabinet will be revealed at 09:00 p.m. (1800 GMT) local time the same day, right after the presidential oath-taking ceremony and another ceremony that will switch the country to a executive presidency model.

Erdoğan arrived in the parliament on Saturday for the deputies' oath-taking ceremony, which is expected to be the longest ever as the number of deputies has increased from 550 to 600.

Before the ceremony, Erdoğan addressed the parliamentary group of his ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party). In his speech, Erdoğan said that the new cabinet will hold its first meeting on Friday.

Erdoğan said that Turkey is determined to eradicate the terror threat. "We won't stop until we completely wipe off terror from our borders. The operations will continue until the PKK terror group is removed from Qandil and if needed from Sinjar," he said.

"We are observing that the powers which have been supporting terror groups in our region for a long time have understood Turkey's decisiveness in the war against terror, and have started to seek ways of reconciliation," he added, in reference to the deal between Turkey and the U.S. to jointly control Manbij district in northern Syria and the removal of PKK terrorist group's Syrian offshoot People's Protection Forces (YPG).

"We will take our country much further by solving the structural problems of our economy, starting with the current account deficit, inflation and high interest rates," he added.

Following Erdoğan's speech, the AK Party parliamentary group voted to choose Amasya deputy Naci Bostancı as its chairman and Istanbul deputy Mehmet Muş, Çanakkale deputy Bülent Turan, Denizli deputy Cahit Özkan, Tokat deputy Özlem Zengin and Çankırı deputy Emin Akbaşoğlu as deputy group chairpersons in a closed session.

Istanbul deputy Mustafa Şentop was also elected as deputy parliament speaker. The parliament is expected to elect a speaker on Thursday, and then goes on holiday between July 15 and October 1. Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım is expected to be nominated by the AK Party.

Turkish deputies are scheduled to convene at 2 p.m. (1100 GMT) on Saturday to take their oaths of office in the 600-seat parliament, two weeks after presidential and parliamentary elections on June 24.

Incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdogan won re-election on June 24, gaining also the expanded powers of an executive presidency, including the ability to rule by decree, as passed in a constitutional referendum on April 16, 2017. Erdoğan becomes both the head of state and government, with the prime minister's post now abolished under the new system.

Erdoğan also told the ruling AK Party's parliamentary group to correctly evaluate the "fine tuning" made by the Turkish nation during the June 24 elections. Erdoğan, who won the presidential race with 52.6 percent of the votes, said: "Our nation made AK Party the winner, but our party could not achieve its target.

"We should correctly evaluate the fine tuning made by the nation in the ballot boxes."

According to the official results announced by Supreme Election Council (YSK), AK Party received 42.56 percent votes (295 seats). In the presidential vote, Erdoğan received 26,330,823 votes. Out of the 59,367,469 registered voters, 51,197,959 had cast their ballots for presidential elections, meaning the turnout stood at 86.24 percent.

Erdoğan said Turkey would enter a new period with the presidential swearing-in ceremony on Monday. He also said 22 presidents, 17 prime ministers, deputy presidents and parliament speakers would attend the ceremony.

The swearing-in ceremony will be held at 4 p.m. local time (1300 GMT) at the parliament in capital Ankara, a source said on condition of anonymity due to restrictions on speaking to the media. Later, a ceremony will be held at the presidential complex to mark the country's transition to the presidential system of government.

The June 24 vote marked Turkey's transition to an executive presidential system of government, doing away with the prime minister's post, among other changes.

Erdoğan also said the Turkish parliament opened on April 23, 1920, with prayers in Ankara's historic Hacı Bayram Mosque.

"We will go to Hacı Bayram for Friday prayers before our first Cabinet meeting. We will pray and then we will hold our first Cabinet meeting."