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Unofficial results from the Indonesian presidential election indicate a landslide1 victory for President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. The president and his opponents have said they will wait for the official results to be announced before declaring victory or conceding defeat. But independent surveys support the result and analysts2 are already speculating on how this victory will change the landscape of Indonesian politics.
Indonesian presidential candidate and current President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono salutes4 during a press conference at his residence in Cibubur, on the outskirts5 of Jakarta, 08 Jul 2009
As Indonesians wait for official results from The presidential election, analysts gathered at the Foreign Correspondents Club in Jakarta are already looking ahead. Despite claims of voter fraud from opposition6 candidate Megawati Sukarnoputri, they expect the official count will reflect the many independent surveys that give President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono more than 60 percent of the vote.
Although the election was not perfect, Anies Baswedan with Paramadina University says it was legitimate7 and the losing parties should get over it and concede, before the public sees them as obstructionist.
"Accept it. Salute3 the president. Move on. People respect you," he said.
He expects the losing political parties to undergo leadership changes but to contend again in future elections. But Baswedan says Islamic organizations, which opposed the president, must seriously re-evaluate their role in politics after failing to have much influence in the election.
"I think it is a historic moment in Indonesian politics in which Islam has always been seen as a major factor and today, I mean yesterday, we have seen that that is not the case," he said.
'One-man show' politics?
Nico Harjanto with the Center for Strategic and International Studies says the margin8 of victory and the presidential party's large number of seats in parliament will make the president, and not parliament, the center of power.
"I think in the future Indonesia will go back to the era of a one-man show politics, where the personalization and centralization of power will again happen in the hand of a president," said Harjanto.
However, he says there will still be checks and balances to the president's power. Although the president has a strong hand in parliament, he will still need to build and manage coalitions9 to pass his agenda.
Newspaper columnist10 and television public-affairs show host Wimar Witoelar says the landslide re-election signaled to the world that president's policies on foreign investment and ending corruption11 will continue.
"The markets went up today," he noted12. "Not because he won, but because the others lost."
He says the president will also have international credibility on global issues and to advance Indonesia's moderate Muslim image.
"Now he can, together with our Barack Obama, build a new world on tolerance13, on ethnic14 diversity and all the good things we have sought," said Witoelar.
Witoelar says President Yudhoyono's second term will be less cautious and more focused on building a lasting15 legacy16.
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