Family policy, women’s rights, and parliamentary initiatives by Ayşe Keşir
Ayşe Keşir has served multiple terms in the Turkish Grand National Assembly as a representative for the AK Party, where her political work often intersects with social and legal matters. Publicly available records contain no verified evidence of direct involvement in cryptocurrency trading, blockchain projects, or authorship of financial technology legislation. Nonetheless, her position within parliament situates her close to the legislative processes that reshaped Turkey’s crypto landscape in 2024–2025. During this period, the Capital Markets Law was amended to classify digital assets as intangible property, mandating licensing for all crypto asset service providers.
By 2025, regulations added daily caps of $3,000 and monthly limits of $50,000 for stablecoin transfers, alongside 72-hour withdrawal delays. With more than 8 million Turkish citizens participating in crypto markets, adoption levels surpassing 12 percent of adults, and cumulative transaction volumes crossing $170 billion, parliamentary actors like Keşir hold indirect yet significant influence in shaping oversight and compliance environments that govern the country’s retail-driven digital asset ecosystem.