KUALA LUMPUR – Voting is underway in Indonesia, with more than 200 million people expected to cast their ballots for the country’s next president and vice-president today.
In what has been called the world’s biggest single-day elections, voters across the archipelago, which stretches across three time zones, are also electing their parliamentarians as well as their executive and legislative representatives at all administrative levels, The Straits Times reported.
All eyes are on the presidential race, with three pairs of candidates vying for the posts of president and vice-president. The country’s current leader, Joko Widodo, popularly known as Jokowi, is finishing his second five-year term and is constitutionally barred from contesting again.
The first pair consists of front runner and defence chief Prabowo Subianto, 72, who narrowly lost to Widodo in 2014 and 2019, and Solo mayor Gibran Rakabuming Raka, 36, Widodo’s elder son.
Former governor of Jakarta Anies Baswedan, 54, who has also set his sights on the presidency, is running with former minister of manpower and transmigration Muhaimin Iskandar, 57, who is vying to be vice-president.
The third pair comprises ruling Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle candidate and former Central Java governor Ganjar Pranowo, 55, and his running mate, former chief security minister Mahfud MD, 66.
A total of 580 seats are also up for grabs in the House of Representatives, Indonesia’s national parliament. A total of 9,917 candidates from 18 political parties are vying for these seats.
Voters began casting their ballots when the first polling booths in the east of Indonesia opened at 6am (local time), and the hundreds of thousands of polling stations across the country will close by 2pm.
The counting of the votes can begin only after the polls have closed.
The complete vote count by Indonesia’s official polling body, the General Elections Commission (GEC), is not expected to be released today, given the large number of ballots to be counted.
But early indications of how the race is shaping up will be available from around 4pm local time, when independent survey agencies begin releasing their quick count results based on sample votes.
The GEC is expected to announce the final official results weeks later.
The polls come after more than 10 weeks of campaigning, with the presidential candidates holding their final rallies on February 10.
Indonesian law states that a presidential candidate needs a simple majority or more than 50% of the votes, to win. They also need to attain at least 20% of the votes in half of Indonesia’s 38 provinces.
Should that fail to occur, the top two pairs of candidates will enter a run-off vote in June, with the third pair eliminated.
Analysts had widely predicted a June run-off, but the tide appeared to turn in favour of Prabowo days before the polls. After months of his electability ratings staying stagnant and hovering around the mid-40% mark, two latest surveys showed Prabowo breaching the 50% threshold.
In a survey by pollster Indikator Politik Indonesia, carried out from January 28 to February 4 and released on February 9, Prabowo received 51.8% of the vote from respondents, followed by Anies with 24.1% and Ganjar with 19.6%.
In another poll by the Indonesia Survey Institute released on February 10, Prabowo received 51.9% of support, followed by Anies with 23.3% and Ganjar with 20.3%.
The next president will take office in October 2024. – February 14, 2024