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Indonesia
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Indonesia election 2024: rivals Ganjar and Baswedan eye deal to thwart Widodo’s succession plan

  • Under the proposed alliance, Ganjar or Baswedan will endorse each other should the February 14 election go to a run-off in June
  • The move is a bid to block President Widodo from extending his policymaking influence through his eldest son who is front runner Prabowo’s running mate

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Indonesian presidential candidate Ganjar Pranowo (centre) speaks as his rivals Anies Baswedan (right) and Prabowo Subianto listen during a debate in Jakarta on January 7. Photo: EPA-EFE
Bloomberg
Two of Indonesia’s presidential contenders are in intensive talks to form an alliance to beat front runner Prabowo Subianto, showing how policy differences come second to winning in the race to lead Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

In recent weeks, officials backing former Central Java governor Ganjar Pranowo and former Jakarta governor Anies Baswedan discreetly met several times to discuss a possible pact. That may include intensifying their campaigning in areas dominated by Prabowo in an attempt to dilute his votes and force a run-off election, according to people from both camps who declined to be named as the matter is sensitive.

Under the proposed alliance, Ganjar or Baswedan – who is campaigning on an opposing policy platform – will endorse each other should the February 14 election go to a run-off in June. The defence minister is now leading opinion polls by a wide margin in his third bid for the presidency, with Ganjar and Baswedan trailing behind.

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Any alliance between Ganjar and Baswedan would only be firmed up should there be a run-off election, the people said. The talks have progressed to the point where both parties are already discussing how to divide cabinet seats should either one become the next president.

Baswedan declined to elaborate on any talks to form the alliance on Tuesday, but he did not rule out the possibility.

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“Let’s not get ahead of ourselves – we don’t know the result yet,” he said ahead of a campaign event on the eastern island of Sulawesi. “We are focused on February 14. We want to get as much support as possible.”

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