2017 Jakarta gubernatorial election

Gubernatorial elections 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.

2017 Jakarta gubernatorial election

← 2012
  • 15 February 2017 (first round)
  • 19 April 2017 (second round)
2024 →
Turnout
  • 75.64% (Increase8.93pp) (first round)
  • 77.02% (Increase1.38pp) (second round)
 
Candidate Anies Baswedan Basuki Tjahaja Purnama
Party Independent PDI-P
Alliance Gerindra, PKS Hanura, Golkar, NasDem, PPP, PKB
Running mate Sandiaga Uno Djarot Saiful Hidayat
Popular vote 3,240,987 2,350,366
Percentage 57.96% 42.04%


Governor before election

Basuki Tjahaja Purnama
PDI-P

Elected Governor

Anies Baswedan
Independent

Under the constitution, if no candidate secured a majority of the votes, a runoff election would be held between the top two candidates. The results of quick counts in the first round indicated that Purnama led by a narrow 3–4% margin, and that a runoff would be held on 19 April.

Quick counts for the 19 April runoff indicated that Anies Baswedan was elected as governor; Ahok conceded defeat hours after the polls closed. The official results of the election is Anies Baswedan - Sandiaga Uno 57.96% to Basuki Tjahaja Purnama - Djarot Saiful Hidayat 42.04% published by General Elections Commission (KPU) of Special Capital Region of Jakarta in May;[1][2] however, unofficial tallies from the election commission showed that Baswedan won 58% to Ahok's 42%.[3][4]

Candidates

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Under regulations, only political parties having 22 seats or more in the regional parliament (DPRD) can put forward a candidate. 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 532,213 signatures from local residents, which will be verified by the local election committee.

This election was contested by three candidates together with their running mate.[5]

# Candidate Running mate Parties
1 Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono Sylviana Murni
2 Basuki Tjahaja Purnama Djarot Saiful Hidayat
3 Anies Baswedan Sandiaga Uno

Campaign and issues

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Racism

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A candidate and a member of a minority ethnic group, Basuki has become the subject of occasional racist comments. During the 2017 gubernatorial campaign, he was regularly targeted by ultra-conservatives and supporters of rival candidates for being of Chinese descent. Furthermore, Basuki's "double minority" background makes him a target of the hardliner Islamic Defenders Front (FPI). The group called for the revision of the Jakarta Charter constitution to remove some of the governor's responsibilities for government-affiliated Islamic organizations.

Allegations of Quran insult

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On 27 September 2016, in a speech in front of citizens of Thousand Islands, Ahok noted that some citizens would not vote for him because they are being "deceived using Verse 51 of Al-Ma'idah and variations of it,"[6] referring to a verse that some groups have cited as grounds to oppose him.[7] The provincial government of Jakarta uploaded the video recording to YouTube in a channel which often feature Ahok's activities.[8] Citizens and pundits criticized Ahok's statement, considering it an insult on the Quran.[6] The video became popular and Ahok was widely criticized in social media such as Facebook and Twitter. A Change.org petition criticising him gained tens of thousands of signatures.[8] Ahok was later convicted of blasphemy for the comment and sentenced to a two-year prison term.

Zakir Naik's visit

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From 1 April to 10 April 2017, a controversial Indian preacher Zakir Naik came to Indonesia in preparation for a da'wah safari in several cities in Indonesia.[9][10] On the evening of April 8, the Patriot Chandrabhaga Stadium in Bekasi, a suburb of Jakarta, was filled to its capacity of 20,000. Zakir Naik, who is facing probes in India, was on the podium. He reiterated what Indonesia’s conservative Islamic groups that had been rallying for in the run-up to Jakarta’s gubernatorial elections on April 19, that Indonesians should elect only a Muslim leader. An Indian newspaper The Hindu mentioned that there was "a correlation" with Zakir Naik's lecture in Indonesia which was broadcast via YouTube with the victory of Anies Baswedan, who outperformed Basuki Tjahaja Purnama and receiving 58% of the vote in the gubernatorial election.[11]

Opinion polls

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First round

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Poll source Date Sample size       Lead Error margin
Agus Basuki Anies
Median[12] 29 Jan – 2 Feb 2017 800 26.1% 29.8% 27.8% 2.0% ± 3.4%
Poltracking[13] 29 Jan – 2 Feb 2017 800 25.75% 30.13% 31.50% 1.37% ± 3.46%
Populi Center[14] 28 Jan – 2 Feb 2017 600 21.8% 40.0% 30.3% 9.7% ± 4.0%
Poltracking[15] 24–29 Jan 2017 800 25.8% 30.1% 31.5% 1.4% ± 3.5%
Charta Politika[16] 17–24 Jan 2017 767 25.9% 36.8% 27.0% 9.8% ± 3.5%
SMRC[17] 14–22 Jan 2017 800 22.5% 34.8% 26.4% 8.4% ± 3.9%
Populi Center[18] 14–19 Jan 2017 600 25.0% 36.7% 28.5% 8.2% ± 4.0%
Indikator[19] 12–20 Jan 2017 808 23.6% 38.2% 23.8% 14.4% ± 3.8%
Lembaga Survei Indonesia[20] 3–11 Dec 2016 800 26.5% 31.8% 23.9% 5.3% ± 3.5%
LSI Denny JA[21] 1–6 Dec 2016 440 33.6% 27.1% 23.6% 6.5% ± 4.8%
Charta Politika[22] 17–24 Nov 2016 733 29.5% 28.9% 26.7% 0.6% ± 3.5%
Indikator[23] 15–22 Nov 2016 798 30.4% 26.2% 24.5% 4.2% ± 3.6%
Poltracking[24] 7–17 Nov 2016 1200 19.2% 15.9% 14.3% 3.3% ± 2.8%
LSI Denny JA[25] 31 Oct – 5 Nov 2016 440 32.3% 10.6% 31.9% 0.4% ± 4.8%
Indocon[26] 18–30 Oct 2016 575 26.4% 30.1% 21.6% 3.7% ± 4.0%
Kedai KOPI[27] 19–24 Oct 2016 694 21.0% 27.5% 23.9% 3.6% ± 4.0%
SMRC[28] 1–9 Oct 2016 648 22.4% 45.4% 20.7% 23.0% ± 3.9%
Median[29] 26 Sep – 1 Oct 2016 500 21.0% 34.2% 25.4% 8.8% ± 4.4%
Populi Center[29] 25 Sep – 1 Oct 2016 600 15.8% 45.5% 23.5% 22.0% ± 4.0%
LSI Denny JA[29] 26–30 Sep 2016 440 19.3% 31.4% 21.1% 10.3% ± 4.8%

Second round

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Poll source Date Sample size     Lead Error margin
Basuki Anies
Median[30] 21–27 Feb 2017 800 39.7% 46.3% 6.6% ± 3,4%
LSI Denny JA[31] 27 Feb – 3 Mar 2017 440 40.5% 49.7% 9.2% ± 4.8%
SMRC[32] 31 Mar – 5 Apr 2017 446 46.9% 47.9% 1.0% ± 4.7%
Median[33] 1–6 Apr 2017 1,200 43.5% 49.8% 6.3% ± 2.9%
LSI Denny JA[34] 7–9 Apr 2017 440 42.7% 51.4% 8.7% ± 4.8%
Charta Politika[35] 7–12 Apr 2017 782 47.3% 44.8% 2.5% ± 3.5%
Indikator[36] 12–14 Apr 2017 495 47.4% 48.2% 0.8% ± 4.5%
Median[37] 13–14 Apr 2017 550 47.1% 49.0% 1.9% ± 4.2%

Results

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CandidateRunning matePartyFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Anies BaswedanSandiaga UnoIndependent2,197,33339.953,240,98757.96
Basuki Tjahaja PurnamaDjarot Saiful HidayatIndonesian Democratic Party of Struggle2,364,57742.992,350,36642.04
Agus Harimurti YudhoyonoSylviana MurniDemocratic Party937,95517.05
Total5,499,865100.005,591,353100.00
Valid votes5,499,86598.845,591,35398.97
Invalid/blank votes64,4481.1658,0751.03
Total votes5,564,313100.005,649,428100.00
Registered voters/turnout7,356,42675.647,335,47377.02
Source: First round (archived), Second round (archived)

References

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  1. ^ Cochrane, Joe (19 April 2017). "Jakarta Governor Concedes Defeat in Religiously Tinged Election". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 12 April 2023. Retrieved 20 April 2017.
  2. ^ Jaipragas, Bhavan (19 April 2017). "Jakarta's 'Ahok' concedes heavy defeat in governor race". South China Morning Post.
  3. ^ "Indonesia has been mercifully resistant to extremism—until now". The Economist. 20 April 2017. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
  4. ^ Sari, Nursita (20 April 2017). Patnistik, Egidius (ed.). "Hasil Final "Real Count" KPU: Anies-Sandi 57,95%, Ahok-Djarot 42,05%". Kompas.
  5. ^ Carina, Jessi (25 October 2016). Rastika, Icha (ed.). "Agus-Sylvi Nomor 1, Ahok-Djarot Nomor 2, dan Anies-Sandiaga Nomor 3". KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  6. ^ a b Sasongko, Agung (6 October 2016). "Video Ahok: Anda Dibohongi Alquran Surat Al-Maidah 51 Viral di Medsos". Republika.
  7. ^ "Basuki Tjahaja Purnama: Jakarta's governor". BBC News. 4 November 2016.
  8. ^ a b "Soal Al Maidah 51, Ahok: Saya Tak Berniat Melecehkan Ayat Suci Alquran". detik.com. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  9. ^ "Zakir Naik Akan Safari Dakwah Selama 10 Hari di 6 Kota di Indonesia". detik.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  10. ^ "Zakir Naik di Bekasi, 28 Ribu dari 32 Ribu Kursi Stadion Telah Terisi". Tempo.co. 4 April 2017.
  11. ^ Borpujari, Priyanka. "Zakir Naik's growing clout in Indonesia". THE HINDU. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  12. ^ "Survei Median: Agus-Sylvi 26,1 Persen, Ahok-Djarot 29,8 Persen, Anies-Sandi 27,8 Persen". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  13. ^ "Poltracking: Agus-Sylvi 25,75 Persen, Ahok-Djarot 30,13 Persen, Anies-Sandi 31,5 Persen". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  14. ^ "Populi Center: Agus-Sylvi 21,8 %, Ahok-Djarot 40 %, Anies-Sandi 30,3 %". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 10 February 2017.
  15. ^ "Poltracking: Agus-Sylvi 25,75 Persen, Ahok-Djarot 30,13 Persen, Anies-Sandi 31,5 Persen". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  16. ^ "Charta Politika: Agus-Sylvi 25,9%, Ahok-Djarot 36,8%, Anies-Sandi 27%". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 2 February 2017.
  17. ^ "Survei SMRC: Agus-Sylvi 22,5 Persen, Ahok-Djarot 34,8 Persen, Anies-Sandi 26,4 Persen". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  18. ^ "Populi Center: Agus-Sylvi 25,0 Persen, Ahok-Djarot 36,7 Persen, Anies-Sandi 28,5 Persen". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  19. ^ "Ahok holds commanding lead in latest poll, with Anies and Agus far behind in a close race for 2nd and 3rd". Jakarta. 26 January 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2017.
  20. ^ "Survei LSI: Ahok-Djarot Ungguli Agus-Sylvi". beritasatu.com. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  21. ^ "Melorot di Survei LSI, Anies Baswedan Yakin Survei Internal | Tempo Pilkada". Tempo Pilkada. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  22. ^ "Survei Charta Politika: Elektabilitas Agus 29,5%, Ahok 28,9%, Anies 26,7%". detiknews. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  23. ^ "Jika Pilkada DKI Hari Ini, Siapa Juaranya Versi Survei Indikator?". liputan6.com. Archived from the original on 29 November 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  24. ^ "Survei Poltracking: Jika Pilgub Digelar Hari Ini, Agus Gubernur DKI". detiknews. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  25. ^ "Survei LSI Denny JA Terbaru: Elektabilitas Ahok-Djarot 10,6 Persen - Kompas.com". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  26. ^ "Survei Indocon: Pilkada DKI Akan Berlangsung Dua Putaran". liputan6.com. Archived from the original on 29 November 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  27. ^ "Survei: Elektabilitas Ahok Anjlok, Anies & Agus Bagaimana? | Tempo Pilkada". Tempo Pilkada. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  28. ^ "Menakar Pilkada DKI dari Hasil Survei - Kompas.com". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  29. ^ a b c "Melihat Hasil Survei Pilkada DKI 2017 dari Tiga Lembaga". KOMPAS.com. 12 October 2016. Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  30. ^ "Survei Median: Anies-Sandi 46,3 Persen, Ahok-Djarot 39,7 Persen". Detik.com. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  31. ^ "Survei LSI Denny JA: Anies-Sandi Kemungkinan Unggul pada Putaran Kedua". KOMPAS.com. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  32. ^ "Survei SMRC: Anies Cuma Unggul 1% dari Ahok"
  33. ^ "Survei Median: Warga Puas Kinerja Ahok, tapi Pilih Anies"
  34. ^ "Survei LSI Denny JA : Dukungan untuk Ahok-Djarot 42,7 Persen, Anies-Sandi 51,4 persen". 13 April 2017. Retrieved 19 April 2017.
  35. ^ "Survei Charta Politika: Ahok-Djarot 47,3%, Anies-Sandi 44,8%"
  36. ^ "Survei Indikator: Elektabilitas Anies-Sandi 48,2%, Ahok-Djarot 47,4%"
  37. ^ "Survei Median: Elektabilitas Ahok - Anies Beda Tipis, 1,9 Persen". Liputan6.com. Retrieved 19 April 2017.