2014 Indonesian legislative election

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2014 Indonesian legislative election
Flag of Indonesia.svg
  2009 9 April 2014 2019  

All 560 seats in the House of Representatives
281 seats needed for a majority
Turnout74.53% (Increase2.svg 3.54pp)
PartyLeader%Seats+/–
PDI-P Megawati Sukarnoputri 18.95109+15
Golkar Aburizal Bakrie 14.7591−15
Gerindra Prabowo Subianto 11.8173+47
Demokrat Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 10.1861−87
PKB Muhaimin Iskandar 9.0447+19
PAN Hatta Rajasa 7.5949+3
PKS Anis Matta 6.7940−17
NasDem Surya Paloh 6.7235New
PPP Suryadharma Ali 6.5339+1
Hanura Wiranto 5.2716−1
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
2014 Indonesian legislative election results map by electoral district.svg
Results by electoral district
Speaker beforeSpeaker after
Marzuki Alie
Demokrat
Setya Novanto
Golkar

Legislative elections were held in Indonesia on 9 April 2014 to elect 136 members of the Regional Representative Council (DPD), 560 members of the People's Representative Council (DPR) and members of regional assemblies at the provincial and regency/municipality level. [1] For eligible voters residing outside Indonesia, elections were held on 5 or 6 April 2014 based on the decision of the electoral commission of each different countries.

Contents

Seats up for election

Legislative elections in Indonesia: April 2014 [2]
LevelInstitutionSeats contested
National People's Representative Council
Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat (DPR)
560
National Regional Representative Council
Dewan Perwakilan Daerah (DPD)
132
Province
Provinsi
People's Regional Representative Council Level I
Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat Daerah I (DPRD I)
2,112
Regency
Kabupaten/Kota
People's Regional Representative Council Level II
Dewan Perwakilian Rakyat Daerah II (DPRD II)
16,895
Total19,699

Parties contesting the elections

A total of 46 parties registered to take part in the election nationwide, from which only 12 parties (plus 3 Aceh parties) passed the requirements set by the General Elections Commission (KPU). To contest the elections, all parties had to have

In addition, at least one-third of each party's candidates had to be female. [2]

Initially, all parties with seats in the DPR were to be allowed to contest the election without the need for verification, but on 29 August 2012, Indonesia's Constitutional Court overturned this provision, obliging all parties to undergo the process. [3]

The results were instrumental to the presidential election in July. The requirement for a presidential ticket had to be supported by a party or a coalition of parties winning at least 20% of the seats or 25% of the popular votes in the legislative election.

The 12 national and three Aceh parties together with their ballot numbers were:

  1. Nasdem Party (Partai Nasional Demokrat, Nasdem)
  2. National Awakening Party (Partai Kebangkitan Bangsa, PKB)
  3. Prosperous Justice Party (Partai Keadilan Sejahtera, PKS)
  4. Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (Partai Demokrasi Indonesia Perjuangan, PDI-P)
  5. Golkar (Partai Golongan Karya)
  6. Gerindra Party (Partai Gerakan Indonesia Raya, Gerindra)
  7. Democratic Party (Partai Demokrat, PD)
  8. National Mandate Party (Partai Amanat Nasional, PAN)
  9. United Development Party (Partai Persatuan Pembangunan, PPP)
  10. People's Conscience Party (Partai Hati Nurani Rakyat, Hanura)
  11. Aceh Peace Party (Partai Damai Aceh, PDA)
  12. Aceh National Party (Partai Nasional Aceh, PNA)
  13. Aceh Party (Partai Aceh, PA)
  14. Crescent Star Party (Partai Bulan Bintang, PBB)
  15. Indonesian Justice and Unity Party (Partai Keadilan dan Persatuan Indonesia, PKPI)

Election schedule

A polling station used for the 2014 Indonesian legislative elections. The four ballot boxes are at the front, while the voting booths are at the rear. IndonesianElection14voting.jpg
A polling station used for the 2014 Indonesian legislative elections. The four ballot boxes are at the front, while the voting booths are at the rear.

The schedule for the elections, as determined by the Indonesian General Elections Commission is as follows: [4]

DateEvent
9 August 2012Voter registration begins
9–15 April 2013Registration of candidates for the DPR, DPD and DPRD
4 August 2013Publication of final list of DPR candidates
16 August 2013Publication of provisional electoral roll
16 March 2014Start of election campaign
6–8 April 2014Quiet period - no campaigning allowed
9 April 2014Election day
7–9 May 2014Announcement of results
11–17 May 2014Announcement of seat allocations
1 October 2014DPR and DPD members sworn in

Electoral system

On polling day, voters were given four ballot papers, one each for the national People's Representative Council (DPR) and Regional Representative Council (DPD) and one each for their local provincial and regency/municipality Regional Representative Councils (DPRD I and DPRD II). Candidates for the DPR and DPRDI/II stand on a party platform. The ballot papers had a section for each of the parties with the party number and symbol. Under the symbols, that parties candidates were listed. Voters could vote for just the party, or one of the candidates (or both) by punching a hole in the ballot paper with the tool provided. Candidates for the DPD stood on an individual basis, so voters need to punch a hole in the candidate's picture, ballot number or name. [5]

Allocation of seats

For the DPR election, each province was divided into between one and eleven electoral districts depending on population. Each of these electoral districts elected between three and ten members by proportional representation with a 3.5% national threshold. [5]

ProvinceDPR seatsElectoral
districts
Aceh 132
North Sumatra 303
West Sumatra 142
Riau 112
Riau Islands 31
Jambi 71
South Sumatra 172
Bangka–Belitung Islands 31
Bengkulu 41
Lampung 182
Jakarta 213
West Java 9111
Banten 223
Central Java 7710
Yogyakarta 81
East Java 8711
Bali 91
West Nusa Tenggara 101
East Nusa Tenggara 132
West Kalimantan 101
Central Kalimantan 61
South Kalimantan 112
East Kalimantan 81
North Sulawesi 61
Gorontalo 31
Central Sulawesi 61
South Sulawesi 243
Southeast Sulawesi 51
West Sulawesi 31
Maluku 41
North Maluku 31
Papua 101
West Papua 31
Total56077

Once the votes were counted, the General Elections Commission eliminated any party that had failed to obtain a 3.5% share of the national vote. It then allocated seats in the DPR via a two-stage process. First, the number of votes to secure one DPR seat in each electoral district was calculated by dividing the number of valid votes by the number of seats to be elected in each district. Each party's vote in each district was divided by this amount to determine the number of seats won outright. Any party with less than this amount won no seats in this first stage. The remaining votes were then used to determine which party won any seats so far unallocated by awarding these seats to the parties with the largest remainders until all seats were allocated. [2]

For the DPD, each province returns four members regardless of size and population. The candidates for DPD stood independently. Voters were given one and only one vote. The system used is the Single Non-Transferable Vote.

Only parties with at least 25% of the popular vote or that control 20% of seats in the DPR were able to nominate candidates for the presidential election. Parties that did not achieve this percentage had to form a coalition with other parties to make up the required percentage share to nominate a candidate. [6]

Opinion polls

Numerous opinion polls have been done by many different pollsters to gauge the voting intention of the electorate. However, many of them are regarded to be unreliable. [7] The quality of polling in Indonesia varies considerably. Further, some of the polling institutions provide little information about their polling methods. Therefore, the data set out below should be treated with care.

Poll source
Date(s) administeredSample size Demokrat
Golkar
PDI-P
PKS
PAN
PPP
PKB
Gerindra
Hanura
Nasdem
PBB
PKPI
Und.
Lead
2009 election 9 April 2009104,048,11820.85%14.45%14.03%7.88%6.01%5.32%4.94%4.46%3.77%1.79%0.90%15.60%6.40%
LSI (Lingkaran) 1–8 March 20131,20011.7%22.2%18.8%3.7%4.0%4.0%4.5%7.3%2.6%4.5%16.7%3.4%
LSN 26 February–15 March 20131,2304.3%19.2%20.5%4.6%4.1%3.4%4.1%11.9%6.2%5.3%0.4%0.2%15.8%1.3%
LKP 20–30 March 20131,2257.8%19.2%18.8%5.1%4.6%3.9%4.4%10.5%8.1%6.3%0.9%0.3%10.1%0.4%
LSN 1–10 May 20131,2306.1%19.7%18.3%3.8%3.8%4.3%4.6%13.9%6.9%4.8%1.4%0.05%11.9%1.4%
LIPI 10–31 May 20131,79911.1%14.5%14.9%2.6%2.5%2.9%5.6%7.4%1.9%2.2%0.6%0.3%31.1%0.4%
IRC May 2013-7.5%12.2%14.7%2.8%2.8%2.4%2.8%11.1%4.0%4.5%0.4%0.3%-3.6%
PDB 11–18 June 20131,2009.4%14.1%14.53%1.2%2.56%2.31%2.56%8.89%1.03%3.33%0.34%0.09%21.11%0.43%
IRC 8–11 July 20137947.66%7.00%17.96%3.30%1.45%0.9%1.19%6.61%5.95%2.11%1.4%1.5%44.1%10.30%
Kompas July 20131,40010.1%16.0%23.6%2.20%2.5%4.2%5.7%13.6%2.7%4.1%13.4%7.6%
Alvara 15–23 August 20131,5327.4%8.4%14.8%3.4%2.1%2.2%1.7%12.5%3.8%4.6%0.1%0.1%39.0%2.3%
SSSG 25 August–9 September 20131,25010.3%5.0%13.6%2.9%2.7%0.9%0.6%5.6%2.2%1.9%0.9%0.1%3.3%
LSI (Lingkaran) 12 September–5 October 20131,2009.8%20.4%18.7%4.4%5.2%4.6%4.6%6.6%3.4%2.0%0.6%0.3%19.4%1.7%
Pol-Tracking Institute 13 September–11 October 20132,0108.8%16.9%18.5%2.9%2.0%3.4%4.6%6.6%3.5%2.1%0.7%0.1%-2.4%
Indikator 10–20 October 20131,200 (400)9.2%17.5%21.6%3.1%1.2%4.7%4.5%9.1%4.1%3.7%0.9%0%20.3%4.1%
Indikator (if Joko Widodo runs) 8.8%16.9%37.8%0.6%2.5%3.6%2.5%6.6%3.5%1.4%0.3%0%21.1%20.9%
Morgan October 20132,98515%21%24%5%5%2%7%12%5%2%1%1%3%
Morgan November 20132,96014%21%29%5%5%2%5%12%5%2%0%8%
Charta Politika 28 November–6 December 20132,0107.4%12.6%15.8%3.8%4.4%3.8%5.9%7.8%4.1%3.9%0.4%0.3%29.7%3.2%
Indo Barometer 4–15 December 20131,2005.4%14.2%28.8%2.5%4.2%2.1%7.1%9.2%2.5%0.8%0.4%0.0%22.914.6%
Pol-Tracking Institute 16–23 December 20131,2007.92%15.93%22.44%3.00%2.67%4.50%4.59%8.67%4.25%2.50%0.25%0.00%23.27%6.49%
Kompas December 20131,380-1,4007.2%16.5%21.8%2.3%3.2%2.4%5.1%11.1%6.6%6.9%1.1%0.1%6.7%5.3%
Morgan December 20132,14414%20%26%4%5%2%6%12%6%3%1%1%6%
LSI (Lingkaran) 6–16 January 20141,2004.7%18.3%18.2%2.2%3.3%3.6%3.7%8.7%4.0%2.0%0.7%0.5%30.1%0.1%
LSJ 12–26 January 20141,2406.12%17.74%19.83%3.87%4.51%4.83%4.67%12.58%6.85%6.94%1.20%0.24%10.62%2.09%
Morgan January 20143,00011%20%27%4%5%2%7%14%6%2%1%1%7%
Median 28 January–15 February 20141,5005.7%17.8%21.4%5.1%3.5%4.9%5.0%6.2%4.8%3.6%1.1%0.1%20.8%3.6%
Morgan February 20142,93410%20%29%4%4%2%6%15%7%2%1%9%
LKP 26 February–4 March 20141,2406.7%18.1%21.8%3.7%3.3%3.5%5.7%11.1%11.3%3.1%1.1%0.3%10.3%3.7%
Charta Politika 1–8 March 20141,2008.0%16.4%21.2%3.2%4.5%5.1%7.2%12.0%4.8%2.6%0.4%0.1%14.5%4.8%
Morgan 1–15 March 20142,30011%22%27%4%4%3%3%17%6%2%1%5%
Morgan 16–30 March 20141,96510%17%37%4%4%2%3%14%6%3%20%
JSI 24–30 March 20141,2009.0%18.0%24.7%4.3%6.5%5.4%7.9%11.8%6.1%4.4%0.9%0.9%6.7%
Election results9 April 2014124,972,49110.19%14.75%18.95%6.79%7.59%6.53%9.04%11.81%5.26%6.72%1.46%0.91%4.20%

Results

The Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle won the highest vote share with 18.95% of the votes, followed by Golkar with 14.75% and the Gerindra Party with 11.81%. However, none of the parties were able to nominate their own presidential candidate for the 2014 Indonesian presidential election because none of them reached the 20% electoral threshold.

PartyVotes%+/–Seats+/–
Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle 23,681,23318.95+4.92109+15
Golkar 18,432,21614.75+0.3091–15
Gerindra Party 14,760,09011.81+7.3573+47
Democratic Party 12,728,95010.18–10.6661–87
National Awakening Party 11,299,0179.04+4.1047+19
National Mandate Party 9,481,3957.59+1.5849+3
Prosperous Justice Party 8,480,1586.79–1.0940–17
Nasdem Party 8,402,8946.72New35New
United Development Party 8,157,5226.53+1.2139+1
People's Conscience Party 6,590,8045.27+1.4916–1
Crescent Star Party  1,826,0571.46–0.3300
Indonesian Justice and Unity Party 1,143,1380.91+0.0100
Total124,983,474100.005600
Valid votes124,983,47489.26
Invalid/blank votes15,033,34110.74
Total votes140,016,815100.00
Registered voters/turnout187,866,69874.53
Source: KPU Buku Data & Infografik Pemilu Anggota DPR RI & DPD RI 2014 pp27,31-32

By province

ProvinceTotal
seats
Seats won
PDI-P Golkar Gerindra Demokrat PAN PKB PKS PPP Nasdem Hanura
Aceh 131222111120
North Sumatra 304443313233
West Sumatra 142222102210
Riau 112222111000
Jambi 71111110100
South Sumatra 173322212011
Bengkulu 41010100010
Lampung 184222222011
Bangka Belitung Islands 31101000000
Riau Islands 31000100010
Jakarta 216332003310
West Java 9118171097711714
Central Java 7718111048104750
Yogyakarta 82111111000
East Java 87171111117152472
Banten 224332212311
Bali 94212000000
West Nusa Tenggara 101111111111
East Nusa Tenggara 132322100021
West Kalimantan 103111110110
Central Kalimantan 6211010010
South Kalimantan 111320021200
East Kalimantan 81211001110
North Sulawesi 62111100000
Central Sulawesi 61111000011
South Sulawesi 242533302321
Southeast Sulawesi 50111100100
Gorontalo 30210000000
West Sulawesi 30111000000
Maluku 41110010000
North Maluku 31100100000
Papua 102112111010
West Papua 31101000000
Total560109917361494740393516
Source: Kompas.com

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References

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