KEY POINTS
  • At the end of the initial presidential election in Turkey, no candidate had surpassed the 50% threshold required to win.
  • Country analysts are all but certain of an Erdogan victory.
  • The winner will preside over a divided country in flux dealing with a cost-of-living crisis, complex security issues, and an increasingly crucial role in global geopolitics. 
People walk past an election campaign poster for Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on May 25, 2023 in Istanbul, Turkey. The country is holding its first presidential runoff election after neither candidate earned more than 50% of the vote in the May 14 election.

Millions of Turks are casting their ballots Sunday for the second time in two weeks to decide the outcome of what has been the closest presidential race in Turkey's history.

The powerful incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, 69, faced off against opposition leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu in what many described as a the most serious fight of Erdogan's political life and a potential death blow to his 20-year reign. But the initial round of voting – which saw a tremendous turnout of 86.2% – proved a disappointment for the opposition, with the 74-year-old Kilicdaroglu trailing by roughly 5 percentage points.