1919 Ottoman general election

[1][2] Due to the dearth of political parties, the elections were dominated by the Association for Defence of National Rights (A-RMHC), which consisted of nationalist local groups protesting against the Allied occupation of Turkey.

[2] Called on 22 October 1919[1] under the Amasya Protocol agreement between the Ottoman government and the Turkish National Movement in Ankara,[3] the elections followed the end of World War I and the defeat of the Empire.

The disbanding of the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP) led to the creation of several parties previously banned or repressed under the CUP regime, including the reformation of the Freedom and Accord Party.

However, Freedom and Accord did not take a role in the elections[1] in the face of the Defence of Rights Association groups supporting resistance against the Allies.

However, its approval of the Misak-ı Millî (National Pact) with the Turkish revolutionaries in Ankara led to Allied forces occupying Istanbul on 16 March.