Good Party

Good Party
İYİ Parti
AbbreviationİYİ Parti (official)
İYİ, İYİP, İyi Parti (unofficial)
ChairpersonMüsavat Dervişoğlu
General SecretaryUğur Poyraz
Parliamentary LeaderMüsavat Dervişoğlu
TreasurerErsin Beyaz
Founder
Founded25 October 2017 (2017-10-25)
Split fromNationalist Movement Party (MHP)
Headquarters2120. Cadde No: 9
Çankaya, Ankara
Youth wingGood Youth
Membership (2025) 392,803
Ideology
Political positionCentre-right to right-wing
National affiliationNation Alliance
(2018–2023)
European affiliationAlliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe
(in the Council of Europe)
Colors    Yellow and turquoise
SloganTürkiye İYİ olacak!
('Turkey Will Be Good!')
Grand National Assembly
30 / 600
Provinces
1 / 51
District
municipalities
12 / 922
Belde Municipalities
3 / 390
Provincial councilors
14 / 1,282
Municipal Assemblies
476 / 20,953
Party flag
Website
iyiparti.org.tr

The Good Party (Turkish: İYİ Parti) is a nationalist, Kemalist and conservative political party in Turkey, established on 25 October 2017 by Meral Akşener. According to Meral Akşener, the letters İYİ are an acronym for İnsanlık, Yenilik, İyilik (Humanity, Innovation, Goodness) and also a reference to the tamga of the Kayı tribe which also represents the party's name and flag. The party is commonly referred to as the “Good Party” in English-language sources and often written as İyi Parti in Turkish sources, though its official name is İYİ Parti.

The party was formed as a result in a split by prominent former members of Turkey's Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) and later joined by some former members of the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP). The party's founder and chairperson, Meral Akşener, and its deputy chairperson, Koray Aydın, are both former members of the MHP before establishing the party. Plans to form a new party emerged amongst prominent MHP defectors after the MHP's support for a 'Yes' vote in the controversial 2017 constitutional referendum, as well as a failed attempt to unseat the party's governing leader. In addition to endorsing a more moderate civic nationalism as opposed to the ardent ethnic nationalism of the MHP, the party runs on an anti-establishment platform criticising both the governing and opposition parties in Turkey for their ineffectiveness. The party describes itself as being in the centre of political spectrum though third-party sources have described the party as being centre-right or on the right-wing of the political spectrum.

It puts a particular emphasis on the restoration of the parliamentary system and the integrity of the judiciary and other institutions. The party has been widely described as an anti-Erdoğanist alternative for right-leaning voters disillusioned with both the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) and the governing Justice and Development Party (AKP).