Prabowo leads in unofficial presidential vote count
Indonesia’s presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto gestures after he solid his poll to vote in the nation’s presidential and legislative elections at a polling station in Bogor on February 14, 2024. Indonesians started voting for a brand new president on February 14 with Defence Minister Prabowo Subianto the frontrunner to guide Southeast Asia’s greatest financial system regardless of issues over his human rights report.
Yasuyoshi Chiba | AFP | Getty Images
Indonesia’s Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto, a former military normal, seems to have an early unofficial lead in the race to develop into nation’s subsequent president, “quick counts” and exit polls present as voting closes.
Prabowo seems to have gained a easy majority of ballots solid in Wednesday’s elections in the world’s third-largest democracy, in response to two early unbiased snap counts primarily based on a pattern of votes made obtainable simply hours after polls closed Wednesday.
Former Jakarta governor Anies Baswedan positioned second, with slightly below 1 / 4 of the votes, whereas the previous governor of Central Java Ganjar Pranowo was third, in response to the snap counts launched by unbiased pollsters Indikator Politik and SMRC.
Official outcomes will not be due till at the least a month later. The winner will exchange President Joko Widodo, popularly generally known as Jokowi, who will not be standing for elections after serving the utmost 10 years.
To win outright, a candidate should acquire greater than 50% of the nationwide vote and at the least 20% of ballots solid in greater than half of the 38 provinces in Indonesia on Wednesday. If nobody achieves this, Indonesians the world over’s largest archipelagic state, spanning greater than 17,000 islands, will head to a runoff between the 2 finest performing candidates.
More than 200 million individuals had been eligible to vote in solely the sixth election in Indonesia because the Southeast Asian archipelago emerged from a army dictatorship below one-time President Suharto in the late 1990s.
The consequence of those elections may go a way in affecting democratization in Indonesia, whereas figuring out if Southeast Asia’s largest financial system would attain developed standing by 2045. It’s additionally unclear if the brand new president would derail outgoing President Joko Widodo’s plan to relocate the nationwide capital from Jakarta to Nusantara or curtail ambitions of turning Indonesia into a world hub for battery manufacturing.
— CNBC’s Celestine Francis Xavier contributed to this story.
This is a growing story. Please test again for extra updates.