TheJakartaPost

Please Update your browser

Your browser is out of date, and may not be compatible with our website. A list of the most popular web browsers can be found below.
Just click on the icons to get to the download page.

Jakarta Post

Rival camps defend methods, claims of victory

Clock is ticking: Staff members of a local election commission count ballots in Pasar Minggu, Jakarta, on Monday

Marguerite Afra Sapiie (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Tue, April 23, 2019

Share This Article

Change Size

Rival camps defend methods, claims of victory

C

lock is ticking: Staff members of a local election commission count ballots in Pasar Minggu, Jakarta, on Monday. Vote counting at the subdistrict level is expected to take 17 days, after which the results are to be submitted to the district or city level.(JP/Seto Wardhana)

As tensions intensify between the camps of the incumbent, President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, and challenger Prabowo Subianto over the expected election results, both rivaling camps scrambled on their own to prove that their respective candidate was the rightful winner of the poll.

The Jokowi-Ma’ruf Amin ticket, which is predicted to win the election as shown by the quick-count results, has even decided to up the ante against Prabowo’s victory claims, as the campaign team publicly opened its own process of final vote counting.

The campaign team also alleged that Prabowo, who had declared himself the new president, citing his own camp’s internal real count, has manipulated the public by not using complete data on the vote counts.

Jokowi’s camp has employed around 250 people working on three different shifts, 24 hours every day to count the C1 vote tally forms from polling stations across the country in a “war room”, located in Gran Melia hotel in South Jakarta. The room, which featured TV screens showing real-time vote counting, is open for everyone who wants to monitor the real vote count, Jokowi-Ma’ruf Amin campaign team executive Moeldoko said.

“We have nothing to hide here and we want everything to be open, so there won’t be doubts or skepticism anymore [...] our mechanism and standards for the real count are also accountable,” he said on Sunday.

Similar to the real count by the General Elections Commission (KPU), the team working in the facility counts votes based on a digitized version of the C1 forms, which record the final vote count of each polling station at the district level, from hundreds of thousands of polling booths across Indonesia.

The witnesses at all polling stations sent the photo of C1 forms to the team, established under the Witness Directorate of the campaign team, which would input the data in real time. The coordinator of witnesses in each district was responsible for overseeing and clarifying the data sent by the witnesses.

As of 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, the team had input around 23.8 million votes from 119,216 polling stations, or 14 percent of the 813,350 across Indonesia. The data so far show that Jokowi-Ma’ruf leads with 56.16 percent against Prabowo-Sandiaga Uno’s 45.84 percent.

Early vote counts conducted by a number of pollsters, including the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and Cyrus Network as well as Saiful Mujani Research & Consulting (SMRC) showed the Jokowi-Ma’ruf Amin ticket had 54 to 56 percent of the vote against Prabowo-Sandiaga‘s 44 to 46 percent.

In a controversial move, Prabowo, a former Army general, declared his victory hours after the election and said the camp’s internal real count showed that he had won the race with 62 percent of the vote from over 320,000 polling stations across the country.

Prabowo-Sandiaga campaign team spokesman Andre Rosiade said that the real count was derived after their witnesses sent the photos of C1 forms to the Prabowo-Sandiaga campaign team as well as to the headquarters of political parties in the coalition.

Witness Directorate deputy director Lukman Edy, however, said the team had found that Prabowo’s claim was not supported by reliable data and in the revealed cases, the rival camp did not put the results from all polling stations in the province into the equation.

In Lampung, for instance, the war room has gathered around 50 percent of votes, which put Jokowi in the lead with 57.6 percent against Prabowo’s 42.33 percent. The tally was already similar to quick-count results by pollsters, such as SMRC which put Jokowi at 57.7 percent.

“[Prabowo’s camp] put our votes at 40.91 percent while they won with 59.09 percent [in Lampung]. After we looked into it, turns out they only used data from 30 polling stations,” Lukman said.

Prabowo-Sandiaga campaign team spokesman Dahnil Anzar Simanjuntak said the team would keep focusing on monitoring the real count. The KPU is expected to announce the final results on May 22.

Meanwhile, in what could be seen as an attempt to diffuse tensions, Jokowi has appointed Luhut Panjaitan — a retired Army general — as his envoy to engage in talks with the Gerindra Party patron.

According to Luhut, he and Prabowo had talked on the phone, describing their conversation as “full of laughter” with “a little bit of nostalgia”.

“Pak Prabowo is a good man [...] I know him as a very rational man who can think clearly,” Luhut told journalists on Monday, “So I just want to suggest that he does not listen too much to those whose ideas are somewhat baseless.”

“I truly want Pak Prabowo to leave behind a legacy as a leader who participates in strengthening democracy in Indonesia and respects any decision by the KPU.”

Your Opinion Matters

Share your experiences, suggestions, and any issues you've encountered on The Jakarta Post. We're here to listen.

Enter at least 30 characters
0 / 30

Thank You

Thank you for sharing your thoughts. We appreciate your feedback.