Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1997 Indonesian legislative election

none


none

FieldValue
countryIndonesia
typeparliamentary
previous_election1992 Indonesian legislative election
previous_year1992
election_date29 May 1997
next_election1999 Indonesian legislative election
next_year1999
seats_for_election425 of the 500 seats in the House of Representatives
majority_seats213
image1Harmoko, 25 Tahun Pembangunan Pemerintah Orde Baru.jpg
leader1Harmoko
party1Golkar
last_election168.10%, 282 seats
seats1**325**
seat_change143
popular_vote1**84,187,907**
percentage1**74.51%**
swing16.41pp
image2Ismail Hasan Metareum, The DPR-RI Stance on the Reform Process and the Resignation of President Soeharto, p39.jpg
leader2Ismail Hasan Metareum
party2United Development Party
last_election217.00%, 62 seats
seats289
seat_change227
popular_vote225,340,028
percentage222.43%
swing25.43pp
image3Vice President Megawati Sukarnoputri - Indonesia.jpg
leader3Megawati Sukarnoputri
party3Indonesian Democratic Party
last_election314.89%, 56 seats
seats311
seat_change345
popular_vote33,463,225
percentage33.06%
swing311.83pp
map[[File:1997 Indonesian legislative election results by electoral district.svg425px]]
map_size400
map_captionResults by electoral district
map_altMap of the election results
titleSpeaker
before_electionWahono
before_partyGolkar
after_electionHarmoko
after_partyGolkar

Legislative elections were held in Indonesia on 29 May 1997. There were three simultaneous elections in one because voters were electing members of two levels of regional government (provincial and regency levels) as well as the national-level People's Representative Council. This was the last election of President Suharto's New Order regime, which collapsed one year later. Like the preceding New Order elections, it was won outright by the Golkar organization.

Background

The political and social environment during the 1997 legislative elections was substantially different than in previous elections. There was a widespread belief among public that this election would be Suharto's last term as president. However, there was no clear successor to him or his New Order regime.

This led to many officials in the government demonstrating their loyalty to Suharto and to gain his favor by delivering a victory for Golkar. This led to what Professor of Politics and Government Cornelis Lay called "a shattering process of structural cheating."

Another factor in the election was the greater global focus on human rights in Indonesia. In 1993, pressure against the Suharto government resulted in formation of the National Human Rights Commission. The commission, which had an unusual degree of independence from the Suharto government, offered a channel for humans rights groups and organizations to focus international attention to human rights abuses in the country.

Participants

Indonesian law at that time only allowed three organisations to participate in elections – the United Development Party (PPP), the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI) and Golkar (functional group), an organisation which started off as a confederation of NGOs, and was officially not a party.

Election campaign

The 27-day campaign ran from April 27 to May 23, with a quiet period of five days before polling day.

Media coverage

The mass media tended to favour "a particular election participant", for example Suara Karya newspaper only reported on Golkar campaign activities and did not mention the PDI or PPP campaigns at all. On the other hand, the daily Media Indonesia was rather more balanced, but overall, Golkar campaign speakers received far more coverage.

In the later stages of the campaign, media coverage was dominated by reports of campaign violence. Suara Karya in particular reported three times as many violent incidents involving the PPP than any other paper.

Campaign issues

None of the election participants started the campaign by announcing or focusing on its main themes, therefore the public really had no idea what they were offering. The campaign was dominated by "sloganistic issues" with very little substance. For example, all three election participants promised to address problems such as poverty and corruption, but none actually said how to achieve this. In fact, Kristiadi sayd that the only difference between this campaign and the previous one in 1992 was that there was less use of Koran verses to try to attract support.

The "Mega-Bintang Phenomenon"

Following the government's forced replacement of PDI leader Megawati Sukarnoputri by Soeryadi at the party's 1996 Medan conference, the PDI tried hard to put forward an independent image. Meanwhile, many of Megawati's supporters gravitated towards the PPP, in a phenomenon known as the "Mega-Bintang" coalition. Bintang means "star", and was the symbol of the PPP. This was an entirely unexpected occurrence. Megawati was seen as representing secular politics, while the PPP was an Islamic party, but the two found common ground as a coalition of the oppressed.[[File:1997 Indonesian Election Campaign Anton Leddin.jpg|thumb|[[United Development Party]] campaigners in [[Semarang]]]]PPP officials explicitly rejected the term "coalition", and said the increase in their support was a symbol of the revival of their party. However, posters and symbols carried by Megawati supporters made clear what the "Mega-Bintang" coalition really meant. The government then banned the use of "Mega-Bintang" posters and symbols, saying it was contrary to election regulation. This ban was used by the security forces as an excuse to remove all such symbols.

Campaign participants

According to Kristiadi, there were three types of people who took part in the campaigns:

  • People ordered to do so or who were after money, or who wanted to see the entertainers laid on at rallies
  • People who voluntarily attended because they were proud to support their organisation
  • Young people releasing energy

More than 200 people died during the course of the campaign, mostly in road traffic accidents and through being trapped in burning buildings during the disturbances in Banjarmasin.

Intimidation and other irregularities

There were reports in the press of intimidation and "buying support", for example pressure on teachers to urge older high school students (the minimum voting age was 18) to vote for "a particular election participant" with a 'reward' for compliance and 'punishment' for failure. There were also other reports of known PPP and PDI supporters being intimidated.

There were also disputes between employees, who wanted voters to cast their ballots at their places of work, and local government officials, who wanted them to vote near their homes, as each wanted to ensure they met their responsibility to achieve their quota of Golkar votes.

Results

While Golkar won 282 seats in the MPR, the PDI lost 45 (winning 56 seats) while the PPP, thanks in part to the pro-Megawati PDI wing support, won 62 seats, an increase of 27, becoming the leading opposition party in the Assembly.

By province

ProvincePPPGolkarPDIVotes%Votes%Votes%
Aceh668,80231.86**1,360,379****64.81**69,9933.33
North Sumatra742,95812.84**4,648,928****80.33**395,5836.84
West Sumatra188,1687.74%**2,214,666****91.15**26,9581.11
Riau313,01313.77**1,879,977****82.70**80,2323.53
Jambi76,9645.90%**1,208,090****92.58**19,8891.52
South Sumatra446,79211.30**3,361,164****84.98**147,1313.72
Bengkulu30,3443.85**747,140****94.77**10,9031.38
Lampung177,2444.82**3,424,949****93.21**72,1561.96
Jakarta2,239,41832.87**4,451,503****65.34**121,9311.79
West Java6,003,47125.99**16,709,824****72.34**386,9381.68
Central Java4,961,28029.01**11,671,667****68.26**466,8402.73
Yogyakarta602,73934.22**1,102,256****62.58**56,4873.21
East Java6,791,39933.89**12,620,089****62.97**630,7083.15
Bali60,7793.28**1,727,810****93.21**65,0443.51%
West Nusa Tenggara268,02214.56**1,484,697****80.66**87,9134.78
East Nusa Tenggara29,6671.51**1,867,339****94.94**69,8803.55
East Timor7,1881.82%**334,718****84.70**53,29613.49
West Kalimantan281,99215.14**1,298,746****69.72**282,03515.14
Central Kalimantan95,7369.83**843,065****86.60**34,7173.57
South Kalimantan406,71925.15**1,164,085****71.98**46,4712.87
East Kalimantan272,96123.66**807,678****70.02**72,9026.32
North Sulawesi42,0182.44**1,648,075****95.90**28,5211.66
Central Sulawesi114,74810.39**937,551****84.89**52,1754.72
South Sulawesi322,3087.34**4,023,937****91.63**45,3771.03
Southeast Sulawesi17,4982.07**822,163****97.22**6,0330.71
Maluku140,60412.98**888,948****82.07**53,6374.95
Irian Jaya38,1963.62**938,463****88.86**79,4767.53
TOTALS**25,340,028****22.43****84,187,907****74.51****3,463,225****3.06**
Source: Kristiadi *et al*.

Presidential election

Following the legislative election, the People's Consultative Assembly (MPR), the legislative branch of Indonesia, met from 10 to 11 March 1998 to elect both the president and vice president of the country for the 1998–2003 term. On 10 March, Suharto was re-elected president unanimously to a seventh term. B. J. Habibie, Suharto's state minister of research and technology, was subsequently elected vice president on the next day. Despite the election, which took place during the height of the 1998 financial crisis, Suharto was forced to resign that May, just two months into what was to have been a five-year term.

President

Vice president

Notes

References

Citations

Sources

  • Nohlen, Dieter, Grotz, Florian & Hartmann, Christof (2001) Elections in Asia: A data handbook, Volume II

References

  1. [http://kpud-banjarkota.go.id/2000/01/28/laporan-hasil-pemilu/pemilu-legislatif-1997/ Pemilu Legislatif 1997]
  2. Schiller, Jim. (1997). "'Festival of Democracy' or Costly 'Fiction'?". University of Victoria.
  3. Nohlen ''et al''., pp100, 115
  4. Stefan Eklöf (1999) [http://www.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:842567/FULLTEXT01.pdf ''Indonesian politics in crisis: The long fall of Suharto, 1996–98''] p7
  5. (7 February 1998). "Delapan Calon Wapres Itu: Di Antara Pujian dan Kritik". Tempo.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1997 Indonesian legislative election — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report