Indonesia to hold presidential vote
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono expected to gain a second term as Indonesian president.

Campaign promises
| Presidential candidates | ||||||
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Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono
Megawati Sukarnoputri
Jusuf Kalla
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Voters will be looking for their candidates to make greater strides against endemic corruption and widespread poverty – major challenges facing the predominantly Muslim country of 235 million.
With around 100 million Indonesians living on less than $2 a day, capturing the vote of the poor masses has been a top priority throughout the campaign.
Yudhoyono, a former army general, has led most opinion polls and is predicting an easy first-round victory, but a survey released on Saturday showed Megawati with a 17-percentage point lead as the campaign period officially closed.
However, another poll showed Yudhoyono with 63 per cent support, enough to gain a second term with a clear majority of the country’s 170 million eligible voters.
Tens of thousands of supporters wearing the blue and white colours of Yudhoyono’s Democratic Party packed into a stadium in the capital Jakarta on Saturday to hear the president give his last speech of the campaign.
“I’m sure that in the next five years, Indonesia won’t just rise but also will become more developed with an even bigger success,” he said.
“God willing, in five years the world will say ‘Indonesia is rising, Indonesia is emerging.”
Meanwhile, Megawati warned supporters to beware of electoral fraud as she campaigned in central Java.
“They think the people are stupid, can be manipulated, intimidated and terrorised,” she was quoted as saying by the Kompas news website, repeating her claims that electoral officials are biased toward Yudhoyono.
Megawati, who leads the Democratic People’s Party of Struggle, has a strong following as the daughter of independence hero Sukarno and was the figurehead of the opposition against Suharto’s regime in the late 1990s.
She became president of the world’s third-largest democracy, but her administration was widely known for inaction and corruption and she was ousted in a landslide by Yudhoyono in 2004.
‘Neo-liberal’ label
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| Megawati and Wiranto have warned of ‘electoral irregularities’ before the vote [AFP] |
The “dark horse” in the race is Kalla who has trailed in opinion polls but has proven to be a tough competitor on the campaign trail.
With his motto of “the faster, the better”, Kalla and Wiranto have attacked Yudhoyono as a “neo-liberal” and championed a philosophy of economic “self-reliance”.
Megawati also advocates a “people-centred economy” and her running mate, former special forces commander Prabowo Subianto, has openly compared his brand of economic nationalism to that of Hugo Chavez, the Venezuelan president.
By contrast, Yudhoyono chose Boediono, a Western-educated economist and former central bank governor as his vice presidential candidate, winning praise from the markets but opening himself to the “neo-liberal” label.
As southeast Asia’s biggest economy, Indonesia is expected to grow at around four per cent this year despite the global economic crisis, making it the third-best performer in the G20 group of rich and developing countries.

Incumbent president has been riding high with approval ratings of more than 60 per cent in opinion polls.

