This paper deals with the authoritarian discursive strategies of political actors in contemporary Turkey with regard to sexuality and morality. The post-2011 period has witnessed significant political contestations over women’s bodies and sexualities in Turkey; the debate over (1) co-ed student housing versus single sex student housing, (2) the lay-off of a female presenter due to her sexually titillating clothing, (3) women’s laughing out loud in public (4) the “negative” effects of TV series on young people’s morality. The ordeal of politics in contemporary Turkey takes up women’s sexualities and bodies as an arena of consolidation of conservative and authoritarian values. The debates presented in this paper indicate that authoritarian political discourses on women’s sexualities and bodies in Turkey serve towards the consolidation of a highly entrenched conservative gender regime that is constantly reproduced by various actors in the public sphere who assertively articulate their patriarchal standpoints. In this vein, this paper portrays the discursive utilization of women’s bodies and sexualities in the contemporary gender regime in Turkey against a background of a complex combination of authoritarianism and the rise of neoliberal and conservative values. As a result, it aims to put forward that current patriarchal discourses stem from a vicious circle where the neoliberal-conservative approach to gender relations contributes to the hegemony of current authoritarian discourses and conversely, the rising authoritarianism further feeds the neoliberal-conservative gender discourses, thereby securing its hegemony.