| ||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||
Results by district. Districts won by Joko Widodo are in red (■), while the ones won by Fauzi Bowo are in blue (■). Lighter shades (■or■) indicate a winning majority of less than 5%. | ||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||
| This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Indonesia |
|---|
| Pancasila(national philosophy) |
| Constitution |
Executive |
| Foreign relations |
A gubernatorial election was held in Jakarta on 11 July 2012, with a second round run-off on 20 September 2012 to elect the Governor of Jakarta for the next five-year term. [1] Incumbent governor Fauzi Bowo was running for a second successive term. [2]
Jakarta, officially the Special Capital Region of Jakarta, is the capital and largest city of Indonesia. Located on the northwest coast of the world's most populous island, Java, it is the centre of economics, culture and politics of Indonesia, with a population of 10,075,310 as of 2014. Jakarta metropolitan area has an area of 6,392 square kilometers, which is known as Jabodetabek. It is the world's second largest urban agglomeration with a population of 30,214,303 as of 2010. Jakarta is predicted to reach 35.6 million people by 2030 to become the world's biggest megacity. Jakarta's business opportunities, as well as its potential to offer a higher standard of living, attract migrants from across the Indonesian archipelago, combining many communities and cultures.
The two-round system is a voting method used to elect a single winner, where the voter casts a single vote for their chosen candidate. However, if no candidate receives the required number of votes, then those candidates having less than a certain proportion of the votes, or all but the two candidates receiving the most votes, are eliminated, and a second round of voting is held.
Jakarta is administratively equal to a province with special status as the capital of Indonesia. Executive head of Jakarta is a governor, instead of a mayor. The Governor of Jakarta is an elected politician who, along with Deputy Governor and 106 members of People's regional representative council (DPRD), is accountable for the strategic government of Jakarta.
The first round resulted with two top-voted candidates, Joko Widodo and Fauzi Bowo to advance to the runoff as neither received majority of votes in the first round. Quick count results released in mass media after the second round voting indicated that Joko Widodo is projected to win the runoff with 54% of popular votes. [3] [4] Fauzi Bowo later conceded and congratulated Joko on 17.00 WIB. [5] Official results were announced on 29 September. [6] Widodo won the election with 53.82% of votes against Bowo's 46.18%.
Quick Count is a method for verification of election results by projecting them from a sample of the polling stations. Different from an exit poll, voters are not asked who they voted for, projection of results is based on official results of the polling station. Parallel vote tabulation is another name for quick count.
The Indonesian archipelago geographically stretches across three time zones from UTC+07:00 in Aceh to UTC+09:00 in Western New Guinea. However, the Indonesian government only recognizes three time zones in its territory:
Under regulations, only political parties having 15 seats or more in the regional parliament (DPRD) can put forward a candidate. [7] Political parties with fewer seats can put forward a candidate only if they have acquired support from other political parties. Independent candidates are able to run if they have gathered at least 407,340 signatures from local residents, which will be verified by the local election committee.
Candidates that declared their candidacy:
Fauzi Bowo in Jakarta, Indonesia is an Indonesian politician and diplomat who was the Indonesian Ambassador to Germany from 2013 to 2018. He was the governor of Jakarta between 2007 and 2012 and previously served as the deputy governor from 2002 to 2007.
The Democratic Party is a centre to centre-right political party in Indonesia. It was founded on 9 September 2001. Its ideology is based on the Indonesian concept of Pancasila, and identifies as centrist.
The National Awakening Party, frequently abbreviated to PKB, is an Islam-based political party in Indonesia.
Parties endorsing Noerdin and Nur Wahid in the first round later gave their support to Fauzi in the second round.
While the campaign for the elections had been mostly peaceful, there were a wide range of issues carried into the campaign. Notable ones including traffic management, flood control, accusation of money politics by some candidates, electoral roll irregularities, and smear campaign dominated the campaign.[ citation needed ]
Political corruption is the use of powers by government officials or their network contacts for illegitimate private gain. An illegal act by an officeholder constitutes political corruption only if the act is directly related to their official duties, is done under color of law or involves trading in influence.
A smear campaign, also referred to as a smear tactic or simply a smear, is an effort to damage or call into question someone's reputation, by propounding negative propaganda. It can be applied to individuals or groups.
Traffic has long become the main issue for many Jakartans. Traffic jams up to 3–5 hours happens during weekdays rush hour and frustrate many locals. Public transportation was also heavily lamented due to poor service and maintenance. All candidates in the race brought forward this issue and promised various approaches to this problem.[ citation needed ]
Money politics is a problem that has marred the democratic process in Indonesia ever since the transition to democracy. There have been many cases of candidates giving money or other incentives to the electorate to influence their voting intention. In the first round of this election, anti-corruption NGO, Indonesia Corruption Watch found at least 27 cases of money politics during the campaign. [12] The campaign of incumbent governor Fauzi Bowo was the main offender with 12 cases, followed by Alex Noerdin's campaign with 6 cases. The electoral commission was also deemed failed to avoid these cases to happen regularly. [13]
The electoral roll (Daftar Pemilih Tetap) had created much controversy since it was made public. The roll which approved by the electoral commission on June 2, was rejected by all candidates except the incumbent governor. Irregularities include double registrations, inclusion of deceased voters, fake names, or redundancy. Since then, all five candidates appealed the electoral commission to revise the electoral roll, and if necessary, postpone the election. The electoral commission mostly kept silent on this issue and promised to do some revision on the roll. The revision process was controversially ineffective and was heavily criticized. The head of the commission was reprimanded for this issue. [14]
Preliminary results released by several media after first round of elections showed Joko Widodo leading with 43% of votes, followed by Fauzi Bowo with 33%, Hidayat Nur Wahid with 11%, Faisal Basri with 5%, Alex Noerdin with 4%, and Hendarji Supanji with 2%. [15] [16] [17] Official results were released on 19 July. The result has shocked every single pollsters, as most have predicted Gov. Fauzi to win the election in a landslide and without having to go for a runoff. [18]
Quick count results released in mass media after the second round voting indicated that Joko Widodo is projected to win with 54% of popular votes. [19] Fauzi Bowo congratulated Joko at 17.00 WIB. [20] [21] Official second round results were released on 29 September. [6]
| Candidates | Parties | 1st round | 2nd round | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Votes | % | Votes | % | ||||
| Joko Widodo | Indonesian Democratic Party – Struggle (Partai Demokrasi Indonesia-Perjuangan) | PDI-P | 1,847,157 | 42.60% | 2,472,130 | 53.82% | |
| Fauzi Bowo | Democratic Party (Partai Demokrat) | PD | 1,476,648 | 34.05% | 2,120,815 | 46.18% | |
| Hidayat Nur Wahid | Prosperous Justice Party (Partai Keadilan Sejahtera) | PKS | 508,113 | 11.72% | |||
| Faisal Basri | Independent | Ind | 215,935 | 4.98% | |||
| Alex Noerdin | Golongan Karya (Partai Golkar) | PG | 202,643 | 4.67% | |||
| Hendarji Supanji | Independent | Ind | 85,990 | 1.98% | |||
| Total | 4,336,486 | 100% | 4,592,945 | 100% | |||
| Valid votes | 4,336,486 | 97.90% | 4,592,945 | 98.39% | |||
| Spoilt and null votes | 93,047 | 2.10% | 74,996 | 1.61% | |||
| Turnout | 4,429,533 | 63.62% | 4,667,941 | 66.71% | |||
| Abstentions | 2,532,815 | 36.38% | 2,329,010 | 33.29% | |||
| Registered voters | 6,962,348 | 6,996,951 | |||||
| Source: Electoral Commission of Jakarta (first round), Electoral Commission of Jakarta (second round) | |||||||
| Votes by district | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joko Widodo PDI–P | Fauzi Bowo Demokrat | ||||
| Votes | % | Votes | % | ||
| West Jakarta | |||||
| Kebon Jeruk | 72,690 | 48.73% | 76,477 | 51.27% | |
| Taman Sari | 39,197 | 60.67% | 25,414 | 39.33% | |
| Grogol | 73,797 | 67.84% | 34,984 | 32.16% | |
| Kalideres | 88,797 | 51.82% | 82,551 | 48.18% | |
| Palmerah | 48,794 | 48.97% | 50,838 | 51.03% | |
| Kembangan | 58,699 | 50.78% | 56,902 | 49.22% | |
| Cengkareng | 123,029 | 56.26% | 95,656 | 43.74% | |
| Tambora | 72,229 | 58.39% | 51,476 | 41.61% | |
| Total | 577,232 | 54.89% | 474,298 | 45.11% | |
| Central Jakarta | |||||
| Cempaka Putih | 22,730 | 51.16% | 21,700 | 48.84% | |
| Tanah Abang | 34,564 | 45.94% | 40,672 | 54.06% | |
| Sawah Besar | 38,073 | 62.41% | 22,935 | 37.59% | |
| Menteng | 18,830 | 45.03% | 22,984 | 54.97% | |
| Senen | 28,069 | 48.43% | 29,883 | 51.57% | |
| Johar Baru | 29,765 | 46.11% | 34,792 | 53.89% | |
| Gambir | 25,509 | 53.32% | 22,331 | 46.68% | |
| Kemayoran | 58,989 | 52.15% | 54,130 | 47.85% | |
| Total | 256,529 | 50.70% | 249,427 | 49.30% | |
| East Jakarta | |||||
| Pulo Gadung | 76,984 | 56.52% | 59,161 | 43.48% | |
| Cipayung | 53,578 | 49.53% | 54,587 | 50.47% | |
| Cakung | 108,514 | 51.45% | 102,388 | 48.55% | |
| Kramat Jati | 63,382 | 49.24% | 65,330 | 50.76% | |
| Matraman | 42,737 | 49.92% | 42,867 | 50.08% | |
| Ciracas | 71,220 | 57.71% | 52,182 | 42.29% | |
| Jatinegara | 73,924 | 50.32% | 72,977 | 49.68% | |
| Duren Sawit | 102,356 | 54.88% | 84,139 | 45.12% | |
| Pasar Rebo | 51,525 | 57.26% | 38,452 | 42.74% | |
| Makasar | 51,090 | 56.53% | 39,283 | 43.47% | |
| Total | 695,220 | 53.21% | 611,366 | 46.79% | |
| South Jakarta | |||||
| Setiabudi | 25,866 | 48.79% | 27,146 | 51.21% | |
| Pancoran | 32,922 | 44.78% | 40,594 | 55.22% | |
| Mampang Prapatan | 32,119 | 45.41% | 38,614 | 54.59% | |
| Pesanggrahan | 57,803 | 57.02% | 43,566 | 42.98% | |
| Kebayoran Baru | 40,720 | 57.79% | 29,748 | 42.21% | |
| Tebet | 52,609 | 47.45% | 58,274 | 52.55% | |
| Pasar Minggu | 70,703 | 51.82% | 65,732 | 48.18% | |
| Kebayoran Lama | 77,577 | 56.95% | 58,644 | 43.05% | |
| Jagakarsa | 65,255 | 47.32% | 72,649 | 52.68% | |
| Cilandak | 51,683 | 55.30% | 41,775 | 44.70% | |
| Total | 507,257 | 51.55% | 476,742 | 48.45% | |
| North Jakarta | |||||
| Cilincing | 76,463 | 47.28% | 85,266 | 52.72% | |
| Penjaringan | 90,007 | 70.13% | 38,340 | 29.87% | |
| Koja | 68,328 | 50.10% | 68,068 | 49.90% | |
| Pademangan | 46,318 | 65.34% | 24,572 | 34.66% | |
| Tanjung Priok | 106,669 | 61.19% | 67,669 | 38.81% | |
| Kelapa Gading | 44,929 | 73.41% | 16,273 | 26.59% | |
| Total | 432,714 | 59.04% | 300,188 | 40.96% | |
| Thousand Islands | |||||
| South | 1,271 | 26.78% | 3,475 | 73.22% | |
| North | 1,907 | 26.39% | 5,319 | 73.61% | |
| Total | 3,178 | 26.55% | 8,794 | 73.45% | |
The Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle is an Indonesian political party, and the party of the current President of Indonesia, Joko Widodo.
Raden Haji Oma Irama, known as Rhoma Irama, is an Indonesian dangdut musician, singer, songwriter, and actor.
Anies Rasyid Baswedan is an Indonesian academic, activist, and politician who currently serves as the Governor of Jakarta.
Presidential elections were held in Indonesia on 9 July 2014, with former general Prabowo Subianto contesting the elections against the governor of Jakarta, Joko Widodo; incumbent president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was constitutionally barred from seeking a third term in office. On 22 July the General Elections Commission announced Joko Widodo's victory. He and his vice president, Jusuf Kalla, were sworn-in on 20 October 2014, for a 5-year term.
Joko Widodo, also known as Jokowi, is an Indonesian politician who is the seventh and current President of Indonesia. Elected in July 2014 as the first Indonesian president to not come from an elite political or military background, he was previously the Mayor of Surakarta from 2005 to 2012, and the Governor of Jakarta from 2012 to 2014.
Basuki Tjahaja Purnama is an Indonesian politician and former governor of Jakarta. He is also known by his Hakka Chinese nickname Ahok, and from January 2019 has requested to be known as 'BTP'.

Faisal Basri is an Indonesian economist and politician. He is a faculty member at University of Indonesia, specializing in political economics, and a member of KPPU, Indonesian competition regulator. Basri is the grandnephew of Indonesia's third Vice President, Adam Malik.
General elections will be held in Indonesia on 17 April 2019. For the first time in Indonesian history, the president, the vice president, and members of the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR), will be elected on the same day with over 190 million eligible voters. Sixteen parties will be participating in the elections nationally - with four participating for the first time.
The Inauguration of Joko Widodo as seventh President of Indonesia took place on Monday, October 20, 2014 at the DPR/MPR Building, Jakarta. This ceremony marked the commencement of the five-year term Joko Widodo as president and Jusuf Kalla as vice president.
The Working Cabinet was sworn in on 27 October 2014, by President of Indonesia Joko Widodo.
Two rounds of a gubernatorial election were held in Jakarta as part of the 2017 simultaneous elections on 15 February and 19 April 2017 to elect the Governor of Jakarta to a five-year term. Incumbent governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, popularly referred to as "Ahok", and his deputy Djarot Saiful Hidayat were running for re-election to a second term. Basuki, who inherited his current position from his running mate Joko Widodo when he won the 2014 Indonesian presidential election, would have become the first elected Chinese-Christian governor of Jakarta had he won.

Djarot Saiful Hidayat is an Indonesian politician who was the governor of Jakarta, in office between 15 June and 15 October 2017 after being acting governor since 9 May. He replaced his predecessor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama when the latter was found guilty of blasphemy against Islam. He was appointed by Basuki as Vice Governor in 2014 to fill the gap left by the election of Joko Widodo as president.

Puan Maharani is an Indonesian politician serving as the Coordinating Minister for Human Development and Cultural Affairs in Joko Widodo's Working Cabinet since 2014. She is a member of PDI-P, the largest party in the Indonesian parliament and the party of the president.
A gubernatorial election was held in Jakarta on 8 August 2007 to elect the Governor of Jakarta for the five-year term between 2007 and 2012. It was the first direct election for the capital city. Incumbent Sutiyoso did not participate in the election, with his deputy Fauzi Bowo facing off against former police general Adang Daradjatun.
Joko Widodo's presidential campaign in 2014 was announced on 14 March 2014, when his political party PDI-P declared him as the party's candidate for the upcoming election in 2014. He was then the Governor of Jakarta, and previously the Mayor of Surakarta. With former vice president Jusuf Kalla as his running mate, he was elected as President of Indonesia following election on 9 July and official KPU announcement on 22 July.
Joko Widodo's presidential campaign in 2019 is Joko Widodo's second presidential bid, following his first campaign's success in the 2014 presidential election. The campaign aimed for Widodo's re-election, with Islamic cleric Ma'ruf Amin as his running mate in a rematch against Prabowo Subianto.

Prasetyo Edi Marsudi is an Indonesian politician from PDI-P who is the speaker of Jakarta Council.
Adang Daradjatun is an Indonesian politician and former police general who currently serves as a member of the People's Representative Council.