Selangor Journal
Indonesian President Joko Widodo (left), wearing traditional attire from Tanimbar Archipelago of Maluku province, shakes hands with Indonesia Upper House Speaker (MPR) Bambang Soesatyo (right), after delivering his State of the Nation Address ahead of the country’s Independence Day, at the parliament building in Jakarta, Indonesia, on August 16, 2023. — Picture by REUTERS

Indonesia’s upper house speaker says legal means to delay elections should be discussed

JAKARTA, Aug 16 — Indonesia’s upper house speaker on Wednesday said it was important for the country to discuss how it could delay elections in times of crisis, such as natural disasters, wars, or pandemics.

Indonesia currently has no framework to postpone an election, and some politicians have called for the Constitution to be amended in future to allow a delay in an emergency situation.

The world’s third-largest democracy will hold a general election on February 14 next year, during which a successor will be chosen to replace President Joko Widodo, whose second and final term ends next year.

“How do we hold elections in the case of unexpected events occurring, like big natural disasters, wars, revolts, or pandemics.

“This is important for us to think about and discuss together,” Bambang Soesatyo, the upper house speaker, said in an annual address ahead of Indonesia’s Independence Day.

Repeated talk among politicians about the potential to delay an election has been a thorny issue in Indonesia, where there has been on-off speculation of manoeuvring by the president’s allies to allow him to stay on beyond his second term so that he can complete his economic agenda.

Jokowi, as the president is popularly known, has repeatedly denied he wants to serve longer.

Parliament last week agreed on a plan to change the constitution to allow for a delay in the event of an emergency, but only after the 2024 elections were over.

Law experts and activists have previously said that any attempt to delay elections to allow a president to extend their stay in office would undo democratic gains achieved after the fall of the authoritarian rule of President Suharto in 1998.

— Reuters

Indonesian President Joko Widodo, wearing traditional attire from Tanimbar Archipelago of Maluku province, delivers his State of the Nation Address ahead of the country’s Independence Day at the parliament building in Jakarta, Indonesia, on August 16, 2023. — Picture by REUTERS

 

 

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