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‘Victory for democracy’: Indonesian activists hail removal of limits on presidential bids

The ruling removes the 20 per cent seat and 25 per cent vote threshold, paving the way for more diverse candidates and a more competitive political landscape

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A woman casts her ballot for Indonesia’s presidential and legislative elections at a polling station in Banda Aceh on February 14, 2024. Photo: AFP
Pro-democracy activists in Indonesia have welcomed a landmark ruling by the Constitutional Court to scrap a regulation that effectively restricted presidential nominations to major parties, paving the way to challenge the dominance of political elites.
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On January 2, the court ruled that a provision in the 2017 General Elections Law is unconstitutional. That provision required a political party or coalition must secure at least 20 per cent of the seats in the House of Representatives or 25 per cent of the popular vote to run a presidential candidate.

Opponents argued the rule reinforced the dominance of the country’s major parties – often supported by political elites and oligarchs – while stifling competition.

Since its introduction in 2008, 32 petitioners have sought to revoke the threshold without success. This time, however, four university debate champions from Yogyakarta convinced the court.

“This is not just our victory, but a victory for all Indonesian people, for democracy, for other petitioners. We hope this brings positive changes to our democracy,” Enika Maya Oktavia, one of the students, told This Week in Asia.

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The court said it changed its opinion after observing the trend in recent presidential elections, which only offered two pairs of candidates.

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