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1987 Indonesian legislative election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1987 Indonesian legislative election

← 198223 April 19871992 →

400 of the 500 seats in theHouse of Representatives
201 seats needed for a majority
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
LeaderSudharmonoJailani NaroSuryadi
PartyGolkarPPPPDI
Last election64.34%, 242 seats27.78%, 94 seats7.88%, 24 seats
Seats won2996140
Seat changeIncrease 57Decrease 33Increase 16
Popular vote62,783,68013,701,4289,384,708
Percentage73.11%15.96%10.93%
SwingIncrease 8.77ppDecrease 11.82ppIncrease 3.05pp

Results by city and regency
Results of overseas voting
     Golkar     PPP

Speaker before election

Amir Machmud
Golkar

ElectedSpeaker

Kharis Suhud
Golkar

This article is part of a series on the
Politics of
Indonesia

Legislative elections were held inIndonesia on 23 April 1987, to elect 400 of the 500 members of thePeople's Representative Council (DPR), the national legislature.[a] The election was thefifth legislative election in the country sinceindependence and thefourth legislative election underPresidentSuharto'sNew Order. The election resulted in an outright majority forGolkar, which retained its status as the ruling party of the country.

According to theGeneral Elections Institution, the election campaign began on 24 March and ended on 18 April, with a four-dayelection silence up untilelection day on 22 April. In addition, the New Order regime also implemented a number of regulations which benefited Golkar. These include a ban on the formation of party branches below the provincial level, a reduction in the campaign period (from 45 to 25 days), and a ban on criticism of government policies.

Golkar, like in all other elections during the New Order, won an outright majority of the vote, defeating both opposition parties, and retaining its status as the ruling political party. It increased its share of votes from 64.34% to 73.11%, and its share of seats increasing from 242 seats to 299 seats. The result for the opposition was mixed. While theUnited Development Party (PPP) saw both its share of votes and share of seats decline, from 27.78% to just 15.96% and from 94 to 61 seats; TheIndonesian Democratic Party (PDI) had their best showing up until that point, as it increased its performance by 16 seats, and 3.05% of the popular vote.

Background

[edit]

In the elections of1977 and1982, the notionally IslamicUnited Development Party (PPP) had seen a steady increase in its share of the vote, despite the New Order government's restrictions on political activity. It managed to position itself as the party of the "little people." In 1984, with the agreement of the government, under the leadership ofAbdurrahman Wahid, theNahdlatul Ulama (NU) left the PPP, which it had been forced to join under the 1973 fusion of the Islamic parties.[1]

Later that year, the government obliged all political parties to adopt the state philosophyPancasila as their ideological basis. In 1985 the PPP was pressured to change the party symbol from theKaaba, the building at the center of theal-Masjid al-Haram in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, to the star from the official symbol for Pancasila.[2]

In 1987, the NU leadership declared that its members and supporters were "not obliged to vote for the PPP, and not forbidden to vote for Golkar". This had the effect of increasing the influence of the NU, which had been much diminished within the PPP.[1][3]

Timeline of events

[edit]
Events[4]Date[4]
Voter registration1 May 1986 - 26 August 1986
Submission of names and symbols of the political parties1 May 1986 - 29 June 1986
Nomination of MP candidates10 July 1986 - 10 August 1987
Electoral campaign24 March 1987 - 17 April 1987
Election silence18 April 1987 - 22 April 1987
Election day23 April 1987
Vote Calculation
  • DPRD II (24 April 1987 - 18 May 1987)
  • DPRD I (24 April 1987 - 25 May 1987)
  • DPR (24 April 1987 - 31 May 1987)
Ratification of election results
  • DPRD II (18 May 1987 - 24 May 1987)
  • DPRD I (25 May 1987 - 31 May 1987)
  • DPR (1 June 1987 - 10 June 1987)
Appointment of legislative members
  • DPRD II (25 May 1987 - 10 June 1987)
  • DPRD I (1 June 1987 - 20 June 1987)
  • DPR (11 June 1987 - 10 July 1987)

Campaign

[edit]

Golkar

[edit]

The priority of Golkar was to secure a majority of the popular vote in the devoutly Islamic province ofAceh, the only province apart from Jakarta where it had failed to do so in 1982.[5][6] In order to achieve this, Golkar made use of two civil servants to run its financial campaign: the managing director of state-owned oil companyPertamina and the head of the state-owned logistics agencyBULOG. Local companies, much more heavily dependent on government contracts then in the past, were the biggest donors. However, the crucial factor for Golkar was the political leadership of Aceh governor Ibrahim Hasan, an economist who managed to unite the traditional and modern aspirations of the Acehnese people. He traveled around the province telling people that a Golkar victory would bring about material development without sacrificing traditional values.[7]

PDI

[edit]

In the final days of the campaign, thousands of young supporters of theIndonesian Democratic Party (PDI) paraded inJakarta carrying portraits of former presidentSukarno. In their eyes, the anti-Western Sukarno was associated with theIndonesian National Party (PNI), one of the parties forced to fuse into the PDI in 1973, and was therefore a clear symbol of opposition to the pro-Western New Order. During the campaign, the PDI had tried to take a stand againstcorruption and economic inequality.[8]

  • PPP campaign
    PPP campaign
  • Golkar campaign
    Golkar campaign
  • PDI campaign
    PDI campaign

Radio and television campaigns

[edit]

The government of Indonesia had arranged a campaign for the government-appointed central board of the political parties to speak publicly in the television and radio. The broadcasting rights for this digital campaign were held by theTVRI for the televised campaigns, and theRRI for the radio campaigns. The recording of the campaign was held in the respective studios. Only national and private radios and television were allowed relay the campaign on the whole, while individual and organizational radios and television were not permitted to relay the campaign.[9]

Radio campaigns[10]
RoundDatePPPDateGolkarDatePDI
124 March 1987R.M.O Mahdi Tjokroaminoto26 March 1987Sudharmono
(Chairman of Golkar)
28 March 1987Titi Juliasih
(Vice General Secretary of PDI)
230 March 1987Aisyah Aminy
(PPP Legislative Member)
1 April 1987Sri Redjeki3 April 1987Benedictus Nahot Marbun
(Head of PDI)
35 April 1987Nurhasan Ibnu Hadjar7 April 1987Sakti Qudratullah9 April 1987Dimmy Haryanto
(General Secretary of PDI)
411 April 1987Imam Sofwan
(PPP Legislative Member)
13 April 1987Freddy Latumahina
(Golkar Legislative Member)
15 April 1987Markus Wauran
(Vice Treasurer of PDI)
Television campaigns[11]
RoundDatePPPDateGolkarDatePDI
124 March 1987Moch. Husni Thamrin26 March 1987Sudharmono
(Chairman of Golkar)
28 March 1987Suryadi
(Chairman of PDI)
230 March 1987Mudrikah1 April 1987A. Sulasikin Murpratomo3 April 1987Fatimah Ahmad
(Vice Head of PDI)
35 April 1987Imron Rosyadi7 April 1987Moch. Tarmoedji9 April 1987Sukowaluyo Mintohardjo
(Head of PDI)
411 April 1987Jailani Naro
(Chairman of PPP)
13 April 1987Sarwono Kusumaatmadja
(General Secretary of Golkar)
15 April 1987Nicolaus Daryanto
(General Secretary of PDI)

Results

[edit]
The results of the election being announced by Gunardo as the Vice Chairman ofLPU.

As a result of the withdrawal of the NU, the PPP lost more than 40% of its 1982 vote, with Golkar seeing the most benefit.[6] The PPP vote fell in 24 or the 27 provinces.[12] The PDI share of the vote rose by 3%, with its share up by more than a third over 1982. Most of the increases came in westernJava, and in Jakarta, the PDI's vote rose to 28.8% from 15.8% in 1982. With the conflicts with the PPP following the departure of the NU, voting for the PDI was the only way of registering a protest against the domination by the military-bureaucracy of the political system.[8] Golkar, meanwhile, achieved its aim in Aceh, and for the first time won an absolute majority of the vote in Jakarta and every other province of Indonesia. This would be the case for every election until the1998 collapse of the New Order.[6]

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Golkar62,783,68073.11299+57
United Development Party13,701,42815.9661–33
Indonesian Democratic Party9,384,70810.9340+16
Total85,869,816100.00400+40
Registered voters/turnout93,965,953
Source: Nohlenet al.[13]

Presidential election

[edit]

Following the legislative election, thePeople's Consultative Assembly (MPR), thelegislative branch ofIndonesia, met from 10 to 11 March 1988 to elect both thepresident andvice president of the country for the 1988–1993 term. On 10 March,Suharto was re-elected president unanimously to a fifth term. Golkar, which had regained its strength after the 1987 election, made the 1988 MPR General Session re-elect Suharto as president. This was certain because Golkar, the party supported by the government, won a landslide victory. This victory certainly had an impact on the results of the 1988 MPR General Session.[14]

Sudharmono, anarmy general, was subsequently elected vice president on the next day. There was originally a debate about who would be Suharto's vice president. Two of the strongest vice-presidential candidates were Sudharmono andJaelani Naro. However, the one who was ultimately chosen as Suharto's vice president was Sudharmono. This ended the debate about the vice president between Sudharmono and Jaelani Naro.

President

[edit]
CandidatePartyVotes%
SuhartoGolkar649100.00
Total649100.00
Valid votes649100.00
Invalid/blank votes00.00
Total votes649100.00
Registered voters/turnout649100.00

Vice president

[edit]
CandidatePartyVotes%
SudharmonoGolkar649100.00
Total649100.00
Valid votes649100.00
Invalid/blank votes00.00
Total votes649100.00
Registered voters/turnout649100.00

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The remaining 100 seats consisted of unelected members of theIndonesian National Armed Forces (ABRI), who were directly appointed by the government.

References

[edit]

Citations

[edit]
  1. ^abSchwartz (1994) p172
  2. ^Liddle (1994) p. 94
  3. ^Liddle (1994) p. 95
  4. ^abGeneral Elections Institution 1988, pp. 53–63
  5. ^Liddle (1994) p. 96
  6. ^abcEvans (2003)
  7. ^Liddle (1994) p. 97
  8. ^abLiddle (1994) p. 98
  9. ^General Elections Institution 1988, pp. 206–210
  10. ^General Elections Institution 1988, pp. 207–208
  11. ^General Elections Institution 1988, pp. 208–209
  12. ^Liddle (1994) p. 92
  13. ^Nohlenet al., pp100, 115
  14. ^Liddle (1994) p. 99

Sources

[edit]
  • General Elections Institution (1988),Pemilihan Umum 1987 [1987 General Election] (in Indonesian),Jakarta{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Evans, Kevin Raymond (2003)The History of Political Parties and general Elections in Indonesia Arise Consultancies, JakartaISBN 979-97445-0-4
  • Komisi Pemilihan Umum (General Election Commission) retrieved 6 January 2008
  • Liddle, R. William (1994)Pemilu-Pemilu Orde Baru (Elections of the New Order), LP3ES, JakartaISBN 979-8015-88-6
  • Nohlen, Dieter, Grotz, Florian & Hartmann, Christof (2001)Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume IIISBN 0-19-924959-8
  • Schwartz, Adam (1994)A Nation in Waiting: Indonesia in the 1990s, Allen & Unwin.ISBN 1-86373-635-2
  • Sudibjo, M (Ed) (1995)Pemilihan Umum 1992: Suatu Evaluasi (The 1992 General Election: An Evaluation) Center for Strategic and International Studies, Jakarta.OCLC 32449151
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