Candidates In July 2017, the People's Representative Council (DPR) confirmed that only parties or coalitions with at least 20% of seats in the legislature, or 25% of votes in the
previous election, would be eligible to submit a presidential candidate. Requirements for presidential/vice-presidential candidates were similar, with only either Indonesia-born lifelong Indonesian citizens or naturalised citizens who were born abroad and obtained foreign citizenship outside their own will being eligible to run with a minimum age of 40 and a requirement to "
have a belief in the One and Only God." If the candidates had spouses, they also had to be Indonesian citizens. A criminal record resulting in over five years of incarceration or an active bankruptcy bar a candidate from running. A term limit of two terms prevented incumbent Vice President
Jusuf Kalla from running as a vice-presidential candidate. Shortly after Ma'ruf was declared as Jokowi's VP candidate, Jokowi's coalition member party
PPP leader
Muhammad Romahurmuziy stated that the coalition, dubbed
Koalisi Indonesia Kerja (lit. "Working Indonesia Coalition"), was final, and would not accept any more parties. In total, the coalition gained over 62% of the votes during the
2014 legislative election and controlled 337 of 560 DPR seats. Aside from Gerindra, parties backing Prabowo did not confirm their support until late: PAN and PKS on 9 August 2018, Demokrat and Berkarya on 10 August, the registration day, though the coalition had existed prior. PAN withdrew from the government coalition, resulting in the resignation of bureaucratic reform minister and PAN member
Asman Abnur. The pro-Prabowo coalition was named. There are five parties in the coalition – including
Berkarya, a new party – which won 36% of the 2014 legislative vote and holds 223 of 560 DPR seats. Two parties – PBB (participated in the 2014 election, but did not gain a national legislature seat) and the
Garuda Party (a new party) – initially did not endorse either candidate. The latter's secretary Abdullah Mansyuri stated the party was focusing on the legislative elections, while PBB chairman
Yusril Ihza Mahendra said neither Jokowi nor Prabowo's camp invited PBB. Later on, however, he would join Jokowi's campaign team as its lawyer. On 27 January 2019, PBB officially endorsed Jokowi. The
Aceh Nanggroe Party – which held 3 of the 81 seats in
Aceh's provincial council – also endorsed Jokowi in January 2019. Registration for presidential candidates was opened between 4 and 10 August 2018 at the KPU head office in
Jakarta. Neither candidate declared their vice presidential pick until 9 August 2018. Both picks were considered "surprising," with Jokowi selecting senior cleric and politician
Ma'ruf Amin despite early reports that former Chief Justice of the Constitutional Court
Mahfud MD would be selected. Prabowo's last-minute selection of businessman and Jakarta Vice Governor
Sandiaga Uno – close to midnight on that day – was also unexpected. Sandiaga was not mentioned in the early phases of the selection.
Nominees Potential candidates Other individuals who expressed an intent, received political support, or were touted as prospective presidential candidates included son of former president Yudhoyono and 2017 Jakarta gubernatorial candidate
Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono, former MPR Speaker
Amien Rais,
Governor of Jakarta and former minister of education and culture
Anies Baswedan, all of whom subsequently endorsed Prabowo, and incumbent
Vice President of Indonesia Jusuf Kalla, who later expressed support for Jokowi.
Campaigns The official campaigning period lasted around six months, starting with a "peaceful campaign" declaration on 23 September 2018, and the final day on 13 April 2019. Before the start of the campaign, both parties submitted their campaign teams to the KPU; Jokowi's being led by businessman
Erick Thohir while Prabowo's was led by former
Indonesian National Armed Forces commander
Djoko Santoso.
Debates . The KPU scheduled five debates to be held in 2019, the same number as in 2014. DPR member and PAN Central Committee chairman
Yandri Susanto proposed that the debates be held in English, but the KPU decided that the debates would be held in
Indonesian. The debate questions from the KPU were provided in advance to the candidates. The Prabowo campaign team criticised it as belittling the candidates. The first debate held on 17 January 2019, focused on legal, human rights, terrorism and corruption issues, and was moderated by Ira Koesno and Imam Priyono. Both candidates described their visions during the early stages. Jokowi admitted the difficulty of solving old human rights cases and promising to strengthen law enforcement institutions. Prabowo shared this sentiment and called for an increase in the salaries of civil servants to reduce corruption. The second debate was held on 17 February 2019, with topics covering energy, food, infrastructure, natural resources and the environment, and was moderated by news presenters Anisha Dasuki and Tommy Tjokro. This time, both candidates utilised more numbers and statistics. In one segment, Jokowi questioned Prabowo on his stance about
unicorn companies, briefly confusing Prabowo and led to internet memes related to the animal
unicorn. On the topic of agrarian land reform, Jokowi pointed out Prabowo's ownership of of land. Prabowo stated that he held the land under cultivation rights instead of full ownership and was willing to return it to the state. The third debate, involving the vice-presidential candidates, covered education, health, labour, social affairs and culture, and was held on 17 March 2019. On 30 March 2019, the fourth debate was held, which was centred around defence and foreign policy. The fifth and final debate was held on 13 April 2019 and focused on economics, public welfare, industry, trade and investment.
Social media With
millennials making up around two-fifths of Indonesia's population, there were significant efforts by both sides to appeal to the age group. One example of a major social media-centred campaign, dubbed
#2019GantiPresiden emerged, initiated by PKS politician
Mardani Ali Sera. It included holding rallies in multiple cities until they were disallowed following clashes with Jokowi supporters. Before the campaign period began, observers had expected rampant
hoaxes and
fake news coming through social media and
WhatsApp. One observer noted that the government was limited in its impact in handling the issue, as it may be framed as favouring the incumbent. One particular case involved activist and Prabowo campaigner
Ratna Sarumpaet. She falsely claimed to have been assaulted, initially causing many prominent opposition politicians to voice support. However, she admitted that she had lied following a police investigation. She was prosecuted as a result and forced to resign from the campaign team, and Prabowo personally apologised for spreading the hoax. Both sides formed dedicated anti-hoax groups to counterattacks on social media, with the Indonesian government holding weekly fake news briefings. Amid public apathy toward mainstream parties and candidates, a pairing of spoof candidates, "Nurhadi-Aldo" (abbreviated as
dildo), gained popularity on social media, with 400,000 Instagram followers within the first month of its creation. The account parodied typical political aesthetics and utilised vulgar acronyms.
Finances On 23 September, both campaign teams submitted an initial budget. Jokowi's campaign team reported an initial balance of Rp 11.9 billion and Prabowo's team Rp 2 billion.
Indonesia Corruption Watch observers deemed the initial numbers "unrealistic" (Jokowi's team spent Rp 293 billion in 2014, while Prabowo's spent Rp 166 billion). Representatives from both teams responded that the balance was just an initial balance, and would increase throughout the campaigning period. For the Prabowo Subianto campaign, in particular, Uno paid for the majority of campaign fees, with his contribution comprising 70% of the reported campaign funds (Rp 95.4 billion out of Rp 135 billion). Uno stated in an interview with
Bloomberg that he spent around US$100 million on the election.
Endorsements Polls By late 2018, Jokowi was ahead of Prabowo in most surveys. The table below gives detailed survey results from a variety of organizations.
NOTE: See warning above
NOTE: See warning above ==Legislative election==