He was appointed secretary general of the
Grand National Assembly of Turkey on 23 April 1920, the day the parliament was opened. He served in this position more than three years. In the time between his appointment as the parliament's secretary general until the
Battle of Sakarya, he served in addition as the chief of Second Branch Office at the General Staff. On 12 July 1923, he was re-elected into the parliament as the deputy from
Kütahya. He was the Minister of Finance between 6 March and 22 November 1924, and Minister of Interior and on commission the Minister of Barter and Minister of Development and Housing. Peker was appointed as the Minister of National Defence on 4 March 1925 when İsmet İnönü formed a new government, and the Minister of Public Works in 1927. He was elected the parliamentary group spokesman and secretary general of the
Republican People's Party (CHP) in 1928. Recep Peker initiated the introduction of the "History of the Revolution" in the school curricula. He taught Republican Ideology at universities in
Ankara and Istanbul in the academic year 1933-1934. His classes were known as revolution lessons
(İnkılap Dersleri). He wrote a book about it. He supported the idea that women should be liberated from the sack (the veil) and that the
Arabic alphabet should be replaced by a
Latin based alphabet. In 1936, he was sent to
Italy to study fascist institutions. When he returned, Peker wrote a report suggesting that there should be a "Fascist Council" within the
Grand National Assembly of Turkey, similar to the Italian
Grand Council of Fascism. While this suggestion was initially accepted by Prime Minister
İsmet İnönü, it was refused by
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, who subsequently dismissed Peker as the general secretary of CHP. On 17 August 1942, he was appointed Minister of Interior in the cabinet of
Şükrü Saracoğlu serving nine months. Recep Peker became the first prime minister of the multi-party period on 7 August 1946, however Peker was a strong advocate of
statism and the authoritarian one-party state. As prime minister, he opposed democratization and the introduction of the multi-party system. He served in this position until 7 September 1947. In 1948, he retired from political life. Recep Peker died on 2 April 1950, and was laid to rest at the
Edirnekapı Martyr's Cemetery in Istanbul. ==References==