Indonesian presidential election, 2004
| Elections in Indonesia |
List of election results Politics of Indonesia Political parties Parliament, 2004 President, 2004 |
Presidential elections were held in Indonesia on Monday, July 5, 2004. These were the first direct presidential elections in the history of Indonesia. Previously the President of Indonesia had been elected indirectly, by the legislature.
As no candidates have received the 50% majority of the votes required to win, a second round of voting will take place on September 20. The successful candidate will be announced on October 5, and the new President will be inaugurated on October 20.
| Table of contents |
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2 Second round, September 20th 3 Candidates 4 See also 5 External links |
First round, July 5th
With nearly 80 percent of the vote counted, former security minister Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was ahead with 33 percent of the vote, although not polling as well as predicted by opinion polls. Incumbent President Megawati Sukarnoputri was second with 26 percent, ahead of former armed forces chief Wiranto on 22 percent. A runoff election between the Yudhoyono and Megawati will be held in September.
Although Yudhoyono is still favourite to be elected President, he did not do as well as expected, while Megawati did better than expected. This is attributed by Indonesian observers to Yudhoyono's lack of a nation-wide party machine, such as Megawati's PDI-P and Wiranto's Golkar, which can effectively mobilize voters in the outlying provinces.
The counting of 113 million votes, already a huge task in such a large and diverse country, was made more difficult by problems with the ballot papers (of which a sample can be seen at right). Voters cast their ballots by making a hole in the ballot paper with a nail, above the photo of their prefered candidate. Because the ballot paper was handed to voters folded in half, many made the hole without unfolding the ballot, thus making two holes and invalidating their vote. Hundreds of thousands of these votes were invalidated before the national election commission (KPU) ruled that such ballots should be accepted. This necessitated recounts in many places, slowing the count and raising fears of a disputed result.
The candidates in the 2004 Indonesian presidential election were:
Final Results for The First Round
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Candidate Party Votes %
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Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono DP 36,051,236 33.58
Megawati Sukarnoputri PDI-P 28,171,063 26.24
Wiranto Golkar 23,811,028 22.18
Amien Rais PAN 16,035,565 14.94
Hamzah Haz PPP 3,275,011 03.06
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Total 106,228,247
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Source: KPU, July 30th 2004
Second round, September 20th
Candidates
The National Awakening Party did not nominate a presidential candidate. Their chosen candidate, former president Abdurrahman Wahid, was ruled out by the courts because he was not physically fit (nor mentally fit, according to his critics). The National Awakening Party leaders put their weight behind Wiranto. Observers doubted that the party followers would follow their leaders' recommendation. At one point Wahid told his followers not to vote for anyone on election day, but after pressure from the party he decided to retract that statement.
The other party eligible to field a candidate in the presidential election, the Prosperous Justice Party, decided not to nominate a candidate. The party instead supported Amien Rais.
The field of candidates for the presidential election was partly determined by the results of the legislative election, held on April 5. Indonesian election law provides that presidential candidates must be nominated by – but not necessarily be members of – a party or coalition that wins at least 5 percent of votes in the parliamentary election, or 3 percent of the 550 seats (that is, 17 seats) in the House of People's Representatives.