Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Subianto loomsmade as next Indon president

The frontrunne­r’s lead, based on the poll, may win him the post without the need for a runoff election.

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Indonesia’s defense minister and third-time presidenti­al candidate Prabowo Subianto is expected to be elected as successor of President Joko Widodo in next week’s election based on a survey released Friday.

Independen­t pollster Indikator Politik’s survey showed Subianto taking 51.8 percent of the vote ahead of the 14 February vote, the poll showed.

Former Jakarta governor Anies Baswedan polled at 24.1 percent while former Central Java governor Ganjar Pranowo was in third at 19.6 percent.

Less than five percent were undecided in the poll that surveyed 1,200 respondent­s between 28 January and 4 February.

Under election rules, a candidate who takes more than 50 percent of votes secures the presidency outright. Otherwise, a runoff election in June will pit the frontrunne­r against the second-place candidate.

Widodo completes the maximum two terms ruling Southeast Asia’s biggest economy and is no longer eligible to run for president.

Subianto is accused of rights abuses while serving as a military chief during

Indonesia’s dying days of the Suharto dictatorsh­ip a generation ago.

Analysts say his vast wealth, nationalis­t verve in populist speeches and strongman credential­s as chief of the influentia­l military have all contribute­d to his lead.

Gibran Rakabuming Raka, Widodo’s eldest son and mayor of Surakarta city, as his running mate also boosted his candidacy while cultivatin­g a “cute grandpa” image on social media, in a bid to win over young voters.

Nearly 205 million people are eligible to vote and the next president will be sworn in next October.

 ?? PAU BARRENA/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? KID hugs a newly installed sculpture by French street artist James Colomina, which depicts two kids holding hands, one of them wears a Jewish kippah while the other wears a Palestinia­n keffiyeh, and looking at a heart-shaped CND peace sign made with red hand prints, in Barcelona, Spain.
PAU BARRENA/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE KID hugs a newly installed sculpture by French street artist James Colomina, which depicts two kids holding hands, one of them wears a Jewish kippah while the other wears a Palestinia­n keffiyeh, and looking at a heart-shaped CND peace sign made with red hand prints, in Barcelona, Spain.

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