2023 Turkish Presidential Election Ballot

2014Exploitable image / image macrosemi-active

Also known as: Turkish Election Ballot Meme · Erdoğan Ballot Meme

2023 Turkish Presidential Election Ballot is an image-macro meme from 2014 featuring an edited Turkish ballot with President Erdoğan on the left and an absurd alternative on the right, the checkmark placed on the latter to express widespread voter disapproval.

The 2023 Turkish Presidential Election Ballot is an exploitable meme format built around an edited Turkish election ballot. The left side of the ballot shows incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, while the right side features an absurd or random alternative, with the checkmark placed on the alternative. The format, which dates back to at least 2014, expresses the idea that voters would pick literally anything over Erdoğan, and it spread widely in 2021 ahead of Turkey's 2023 presidential election3.

TL;DR

The 2023 Turkish Presidential Election Ballot is an exploitable meme format built around an edited Turkish election ballot.

Overview

The meme takes the format of an official Turkish presidential election ballot. On the left, Erdoğan's name and photo appear as a candidate option. On the right, the meme creator inserts whatever they want: a chimpanzee, a bag of chips, a fictional character, or just the phrase "I don't even care anymore." The checkmark always goes to the right side, making the joke that any conceivable alternative beats the longtime Turkish leader3.

The format works as political satire rooted in frustration with Erdoğan's long grip on power. He first became Prime Minister in 2003, then shifted to the presidency in 2014, and pushed through constitutional reforms in 2017-2018 that expanded presidential powers and abolished the prime minister's post entirely1. For critics both inside and outside Turkey, the ballot meme became a shorthand for exhaustion with a political system that seemed to offer fewer and fewer real choices3.

The earliest known version appeared on Twitter in 2014, posted by the account @FannibalTurkey. That version used a slightly different layout than later iterations and showed voters selecting Hannibal Lecter over Erdoğan and the other candidates on the ballot. It picked up 23 likes and 10 retweets over the course of roughly eight years3.

The meme's political context traces back to Erdoğan's consolidation of power. After winning the presidency in 2014, he survived a coup attempt in July 2016 and responded with massive purges, removing thousands from government positions and jailing opponents1. A 2017 constitutional referendum narrowly approved the shift to a presidential system, and by the 2018 elections, the transition was complete2. For opposition-minded internet users, the ballot format became a way to channel their frustration into humor3.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter
Creator
@FannibalTurkey
Date
2014
Year
2014

The earliest known version appeared on Twitter in 2014, posted by the account @FannibalTurkey. That version used a slightly different layout than later iterations and showed voters selecting Hannibal Lecter over Erdoğan and the other candidates on the ballot. It picked up 23 likes and 10 retweets over the course of roughly eight years.

The meme's political context traces back to Erdoğan's consolidation of power. After winning the presidency in 2014, he survived a coup attempt in July 2016 and responded with massive purges, removing thousands from government positions and jailing opponents. A 2017 constitutional referendum narrowly approved the shift to a presidential system, and by the 2018 elections, the transition was complete. For opposition-minded internet users, the ballot format became a way to channel their frustration into humor.

How It Spread

The meme hit its widest circulation in 2021, three years after the presidential system took full effect and two years before the next scheduled election.

On April 7, 2021, the Facebook page Kemalist Memes posted a version where voters selected a chimpanzee named Greg over Erdoğan. It earned 12 likes over the following year.

The format really took off on May 14, 2021, when the opposition-aligned press outlet @solcugazette posted a version with the text "I don't even care anymore" checked on the right side. That post pulled in over 6,448 likes within a year and generated hundreds of replies, many containing new variations of the meme.

On October 24, 2021, Twitter user @tyfnozdl posted a version showing a voter choosing a bag of chips over Erdoğan. It earned nearly 10,000 likes and over 400 retweets in two years, making it one of the most popular single examples of the format.

As the actual 2023 election approached, the meme gained renewed relevance. The general election was held on May 14, 2023, with Erdoğan facing challenger Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu. International election monitors noted restrictions on freedoms of assembly, association, and expression during the campaign, along with state media heavily favoring Erdoğan's AK Party. A 2023 study published in PLOS One flagged the election as "riddled with statistical irregularities, that may be indicative of electoral fraud". Erdoğan narrowly missed a first-round majority and won the runoff on May 28.

How to Use This Meme

The format typically follows a simple structure:

1

Start with the Turkish ballot template, showing Erdoğan's name and photo on the left side.

2

Replace the right side candidate with something absurd, random, or obviously unqualified (a fictional character, an animal, an inanimate object, or a vague sentiment).

3

Place the checkmark on the right side.

Cultural Impact

The meme sits at the intersection of internet humor and genuine political dissent. Turkey under Erdoğan saw increasing restrictions on social media. During the 2023 election campaign, authorities made threats to throttle social media platforms and arrested people for posting criticisms online. In that environment, the ballot meme functioned as a relatively safe form of protest: absurdist enough to avoid direct confrontation, but pointed enough that the message was clear.

The format also reflects a broader pattern in meme culture where citizens of countries with dominant leaders use humor to express dissatisfaction when direct political speech carries risk. The ballot template gave Turkish internet users and diaspora communities a shared visual language for opposition sentiment.

Erdoğan's own relationship with digital platforms added another layer. He famously used social media to mobilize supporters during the 2016 coup attempt, rallying civilians via FaceTime and Twitter to resist the military takeover. The ballot meme turned that same digital space into a venue for mockery of his rule.

Fun Facts

The earliest known version of the meme predates the 2017 constitutional referendum that formally expanded Erdoğan's powers, showing that online opposition humor was already well-established before his biggest power grabs.

The May 14, 2021 @solcugazette post date coincidentally matched the exact date of the 2023 presidential election two years later.

Erdoğan was originally barred from office after a 1998 conviction for inciting religious hatred, stemming from a poem he recited comparing mosques to barracks and minarets to bayonets. A constitutional amendment in 2002 cleared the way for his return to politics.

Turkey's 2023 election was the first to feature four presidential candidates on the ballot, with positions determined by a drawing conducted by the Supreme Electoral Council on April 1.

Derivatives & Variations

"I don't even care anymore" variant:

Posted by @solcugazette in May 2021, this version replaced the alternative candidate with pure text expressing voter apathy and spawned numerous reply-chain variations[3].

Animal ballot variants:

Multiple versions feature animals as the preferred candidate, including the "Greg the chimpanzee" version from Kemalist Memes[3].

Food item variants:

The bag of chips version by @tyfnozdl became one of the most-liked individual examples, inspiring similar food-based edits[3].

Fictional character variants:

The original 2014 post by @FannibalTurkey featured Hannibal Lecter, setting the template for pop culture character inserts[3].

Frequently Asked Questions

2023 Turkish Presidential Election Ballot

2014Exploitable image / image macrosemi-active

Also known as: Turkish Election Ballot Meme · Erdoğan Ballot Meme

2023 Turkish Presidential Election Ballot is an image-macro meme from 2014 featuring an edited Turkish ballot with President Erdoğan on the left and an absurd alternative on the right, the checkmark placed on the latter to express widespread voter disapproval.

The 2023 Turkish Presidential Election Ballot is an exploitable meme format built around an edited Turkish election ballot. The left side of the ballot shows incumbent President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, while the right side features an absurd or random alternative, with the checkmark placed on the alternative. The format, which dates back to at least 2014, expresses the idea that voters would pick literally anything over Erdoğan, and it spread widely in 2021 ahead of Turkey's 2023 presidential election.

TL;DR

The 2023 Turkish Presidential Election Ballot is an exploitable meme format built around an edited Turkish election ballot.

Overview

The meme takes the format of an official Turkish presidential election ballot. On the left, Erdoğan's name and photo appear as a candidate option. On the right, the meme creator inserts whatever they want: a chimpanzee, a bag of chips, a fictional character, or just the phrase "I don't even care anymore." The checkmark always goes to the right side, making the joke that any conceivable alternative beats the longtime Turkish leader.

The format works as political satire rooted in frustration with Erdoğan's long grip on power. He first became Prime Minister in 2003, then shifted to the presidency in 2014, and pushed through constitutional reforms in 2017-2018 that expanded presidential powers and abolished the prime minister's post entirely. For critics both inside and outside Turkey, the ballot meme became a shorthand for exhaustion with a political system that seemed to offer fewer and fewer real choices.

The earliest known version appeared on Twitter in 2014, posted by the account @FannibalTurkey. That version used a slightly different layout than later iterations and showed voters selecting Hannibal Lecter over Erdoğan and the other candidates on the ballot. It picked up 23 likes and 10 retweets over the course of roughly eight years.

The meme's political context traces back to Erdoğan's consolidation of power. After winning the presidency in 2014, he survived a coup attempt in July 2016 and responded with massive purges, removing thousands from government positions and jailing opponents. A 2017 constitutional referendum narrowly approved the shift to a presidential system, and by the 2018 elections, the transition was complete. For opposition-minded internet users, the ballot format became a way to channel their frustration into humor.

Origin & Background

Platform
Twitter
Creator
@FannibalTurkey
Date
2014
Year
2014

The earliest known version appeared on Twitter in 2014, posted by the account @FannibalTurkey. That version used a slightly different layout than later iterations and showed voters selecting Hannibal Lecter over Erdoğan and the other candidates on the ballot. It picked up 23 likes and 10 retweets over the course of roughly eight years.

The meme's political context traces back to Erdoğan's consolidation of power. After winning the presidency in 2014, he survived a coup attempt in July 2016 and responded with massive purges, removing thousands from government positions and jailing opponents. A 2017 constitutional referendum narrowly approved the shift to a presidential system, and by the 2018 elections, the transition was complete. For opposition-minded internet users, the ballot format became a way to channel their frustration into humor.

How It Spread

The meme hit its widest circulation in 2021, three years after the presidential system took full effect and two years before the next scheduled election.

On April 7, 2021, the Facebook page Kemalist Memes posted a version where voters selected a chimpanzee named Greg over Erdoğan. It earned 12 likes over the following year.

The format really took off on May 14, 2021, when the opposition-aligned press outlet @solcugazette posted a version with the text "I don't even care anymore" checked on the right side. That post pulled in over 6,448 likes within a year and generated hundreds of replies, many containing new variations of the meme.

On October 24, 2021, Twitter user @tyfnozdl posted a version showing a voter choosing a bag of chips over Erdoğan. It earned nearly 10,000 likes and over 400 retweets in two years, making it one of the most popular single examples of the format.

As the actual 2023 election approached, the meme gained renewed relevance. The general election was held on May 14, 2023, with Erdoğan facing challenger Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu. International election monitors noted restrictions on freedoms of assembly, association, and expression during the campaign, along with state media heavily favoring Erdoğan's AK Party. A 2023 study published in PLOS One flagged the election as "riddled with statistical irregularities, that may be indicative of electoral fraud". Erdoğan narrowly missed a first-round majority and won the runoff on May 28.

How to Use This Meme

The format typically follows a simple structure:

1

Start with the Turkish ballot template, showing Erdoğan's name and photo on the left side.

2

Replace the right side candidate with something absurd, random, or obviously unqualified (a fictional character, an animal, an inanimate object, or a vague sentiment).

3

Place the checkmark on the right side.

Cultural Impact

The meme sits at the intersection of internet humor and genuine political dissent. Turkey under Erdoğan saw increasing restrictions on social media. During the 2023 election campaign, authorities made threats to throttle social media platforms and arrested people for posting criticisms online. In that environment, the ballot meme functioned as a relatively safe form of protest: absurdist enough to avoid direct confrontation, but pointed enough that the message was clear.

The format also reflects a broader pattern in meme culture where citizens of countries with dominant leaders use humor to express dissatisfaction when direct political speech carries risk. The ballot template gave Turkish internet users and diaspora communities a shared visual language for opposition sentiment.

Erdoğan's own relationship with digital platforms added another layer. He famously used social media to mobilize supporters during the 2016 coup attempt, rallying civilians via FaceTime and Twitter to resist the military takeover. The ballot meme turned that same digital space into a venue for mockery of his rule.

Fun Facts

The earliest known version of the meme predates the 2017 constitutional referendum that formally expanded Erdoğan's powers, showing that online opposition humor was already well-established before his biggest power grabs.

The May 14, 2021 @solcugazette post date coincidentally matched the exact date of the 2023 presidential election two years later.

Erdoğan was originally barred from office after a 1998 conviction for inciting religious hatred, stemming from a poem he recited comparing mosques to barracks and minarets to bayonets. A constitutional amendment in 2002 cleared the way for his return to politics.

Turkey's 2023 election was the first to feature four presidential candidates on the ballot, with positions determined by a drawing conducted by the Supreme Electoral Council on April 1.

Derivatives & Variations

"I don't even care anymore" variant:

Posted by @solcugazette in May 2021, this version replaced the alternative candidate with pure text expressing voter apathy and spawned numerous reply-chain variations[3].

Animal ballot variants:

Multiple versions feature animals as the preferred candidate, including the "Greg the chimpanzee" version from Kemalist Memes[3].

Food item variants:

The bag of chips version by @tyfnozdl became one of the most-liked individual examples, inspiring similar food-based edits[3].

Fictional character variants:

The original 2014 post by @FannibalTurkey featured Hannibal Lecter, setting the template for pop culture character inserts[3].

Frequently Asked Questions