Paker, Evren BaltaDemiralp, S.Demiralp, S.2023-10-302023-10-302023-10-201468-3849http://hdl.handle.net/10679/8902https://doi.org/10.1080/14683849.2023.2200941This study examines patterns of voter defection from Turkey’s incumbent AKP amid major economic and democratic decline. As in other electoral autocracies, defectors constitute a small but politically significant group in Turkey, where the opposition’s ability to secure a transition from authoritarianism depends on reducing the incumbent’s vote share. Based on survey data gathered in November 2021 and February 2022, we find that while the high level of partizanship among AKP voters hinders defection, persistent economic and democratic decline still reduces incumbent support. We also found that defections are higher outside of the lowest income group. Our findings have important implications for opposition strategies in electoral autocracies. Directing public debate away from identity issues to economic and democratic problems increases the likelihood of defection. In addition, offering voters clear superior alternatives decreases the cost of uncertainty that comes with change and increases the likelihood of defection.enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccessDebating voter defection in TurkeyArticle24573976300097354950000110.1080/14683849.2023.2200941Economic crisisEconomic votingPartizanshipVoter defectionVoter vulnerability2-s2.0-85153236958