Turkey's landmark election headed Sunday to a likely Runoff following a stormy night in which President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's secular rivals contested the ballot count. The candidates are Kemal Kilicdaroglu, a secular conservative, and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, a conservative who has been in power for 10 years. Erdogan's first decade of economic revival and warming relations with Europe was followed by a second one filled with social and political turmoil. He responded to a failed 2016 coup attempt with sweeping purges that sent chills through Turkish society and made him an increasingly uncomfortable partner for the West. The emergence of Kilicdaroglu and his six-party opposition alliance — the type of broad-based coalition Erdogan excelled at forging throughout his career — gives foreign allies and Turkish voters a clear alternative. A runoff on May 28 could give Erdogan time to regroup and reframe the debate. But he would still be hounded by Turkey's most dire economic crisis of his time in power, and disquiet over
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