Indonesia polls may not be that close a call
Surveys don't show Jokowi camp's more aggressive tone, Prabowo's blunders
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
AS 190 million Indonesian voters head for the polls today, the candidates vying to become their country's second directly elected president are virtual photo negatives of the other.
The most recent polls say the result is a toss-up between a member of the country's most powerful families and a man whose friends convinced him to run for public office a decade ago at a modest restaurant and ice cream parlour.
In one corner is the former special forces general Prabowo Subianto, descended from wealthy Javanese aristocracy and educated abroad. He disparages the country's democratisation and muses about a return to the very constitution that afforded his one-time father-in-law, the dictator Suharto, sweeping powers of patronage and decades in power. Mr Prabowo has never held public office.
Copyright SPH Media. All rights reserved.
TRENDING NOW
Vietnam formalises new state leadership, redefining ‘four pillars’ power balance
‘Largest Singapore commercial S-Reit proxy’: analysts say buy CICT shares after Paragon acquisition
From 1MDB to ‘corporate mafia’: Is Malaysia facing a new governance test?
Why where you park your joint venture matters: Lessons from a US$689 million shareholder dispute