Background The DYP's predecessor was the
Democrat Party (, DP), which was a conservative party responsible for relaxing Turkey's strict secularism laws. The party was suppressed in the
1960 military coup d'état and later reestablished as the
Justice Party (Adalet Partisi, AP), which was disbanded in the
coup of 1980. Both parties staunchly rivaled the social democratic
Republican People's Party (CHP). The military overthrew their governments on several occasions: In 1960, the
Adnan Menderes government was deposed and Menderes himself was executed; on March 26, 1971, the government of party veteran Demirel was
threatened with military intervention and forced to resign; and on September 12, 1980, the military carried out a full-scale
coup, suppressing all political parties, including Demirel's AP.
Early history (1983–1991) In 1983, Demirel created the True Path Party (, DYP), the successor of the AP – still conservative, but now with a secular-leaning policy instead of a religious-leaning one. Even so, the military and conservative governments banned the new party, and the DYP was declared illegal and its members were persecuted. Finally, in 1987, the party was legalized, and entered Turkish politics for the first time. It was hugely successful.
DYP in government (1991–1997) In the
1991 general elections, the DYP defeated the Motherland Party (, ANAP) and the
Social Democratic Populist Party (SHP), forming a coalition government with the SHP. Süleyman Demirel became Prime Minister once again. After Demirel was elected Turkey's 9th
President, following the death of
Turgut Özal, the party leadership was taken over by
Tansu Çiller, who became the country's first woman Prime Minister. In 1995, the coalition with the SHP, now merged with the
Republican People's Party (CHP), collapsed. After the
December 1995 elections, the weakened DYP formed first a coalition with ANAP, led by
Mesut Yılmaz. Then, in June 1996, the DYP switched allegiances to form Turkey's first Islamist government with the
Welfare Party's leader
Necmettin Erbakan.
DYP in opposition (1999–2007) In 1997, with the so-called
"post-modern coup", the military effected the RP-DYP government's resignation. In the meantime, the DYP had been weakened by the effects of the
Susurluk scandal. DYP and others expected to form a government under Çiller, but President
Süleyman Demirel asked ANAP leader
Mesut Yılmaz to form the new government instead, and the DYP was not included. In 1998, the DYP took a turn for the worse. The DYP then had heavy recruitment among police intelligence. The DYP secured 9.55% of the vote in the
November 2002 general election, slightly under the 10%
election threshold to enter parliament. However, a number of independents later joined the party, and, in November 2004, they had 4 seats in Turkey's 549-seat parliament. The figure hardly made the DYP a driving force in Turkish politics, but it remained Turkey's third largest party and particularly influential in rural areas. Tansu Çiller resigned as party leader following the 2002 election defeat; she was eventually replaced by
Mehmet Ağar.
Democrat Party (2007–present) On 5 May 2007, it was announced that DYP and the
Motherland Party (ANAP) would merge to form the Democrat Party (). For that occasion, DYP renamed itself (based on the
previous party of the same name), and it was planned that ANAP would join the newly founded DP. Shortly before the election, however, the merging attempt failed. However, ANAP stated it would not contest the upcoming elections. After the DP only got about 6% of the votes in the
2007 election, Ağar resigned as party leader. After Zeybek's resignation,
Gültekin Uysal has become the party leader. In the 2018 elections, the party participated in the
Nation Alliance with the
Republican People's Party, the
Good Party, and the
Felicity Party. == Election results ==