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People's Conscience Party

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People's Conscience Party
Partai Hati Nurani Rakyat
(Partai Hanura)
 
 
Chair Wiranto
Secretary General Yus Usman Sumanegara
 
Founded 21 December 2006
Headquarters Jakarta
DPR Seats N/A (new party)
 
Ideology Pancasila
Ballot number
01
Presidential candidate
Website http://www.hanura.com/

The People's Conscience Party (Indonesian: Partai Hati Nurani Rakyat, Partai Hanura) is a political party in Indonesia. It was established following a meeting in Jakarta on 13-14 December 2006 and is headed by indicted war criminal and former Indonesian Military commander Wiranto.[1][2][3]

After being eliminated in the first round of the 2004 Indonesian presidential election, Wiranto was "traumatized" by his defeat and decided not to run for the presidency without his own political vehicle. He resigned from the Golkar Party in 2006 and established a new political party, the name of which he chose himself. The party's target voters are the people who voted for Wiranto in 2004. The party conducted a door-door grassroots campaign. The basis of its support is in West Java, Gorontalo, South Sulawesi, North Sulawesi, West Nusa Tenggara and Bali The party's target in the 2004 elections was 15 percent of the vote.[4]

The result of the Indonesian legislative election, 2009 was announced on 9 May 2009. Hanura won 3.77 percent of the national vote, which translated into 18 legislative seats. The party is now supporting Golkar chairman Jusuf Kalla for the presidency. Hanura chairman Wiranto will be his vice-presidential candidate, despite Wiranto's previous statement that he would not settle for the vice-presidency.[5][6][7][8]

[edit] Regional strength

In the legislative election held on 9 April 2009, support for Hanura was higher than the party's national average in the following provinces:

West Sumatra 3.8%

Bengkulu 5.0%

Jambi 6.7%

South Sumatra 4.5%

Lampung 4.5%

Banten 4.2%

Central Kalimantan 4.7%

South Kalimantan 4.0%

West Nusa Tenggara 4.7%

East Nusa Tenggara 4.8%

Central Sulawesi 6.4%

South Sulawesi 4.7%

South East Sulawesi 4.7%

Gorontalo 11.9%

Maluku 5.8%

North Maluku 6.8%

Papua 7.4%


[edit] References

  1. ^ Profil Partai Politik (Profile of Political Parties), Kompas newspaper 14 July 2008 pp. 38-39
  2. ^ http://www.hanura.com/content/view/126/44/ Official party website (Indonesian)
  3. ^ http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=990DE2DC143CF935A15751C0A9659C8B63 New York Times World Briefing | Asia: East Timor: Indonesian General Is Charged (accessed 20/7/08)
  4. ^ Tempo magazine No. 0931/March 31-April 06, 2009, pp28-29
  5. ^ Indonesian General Election Commission website Official Election Results
  6. ^ Indonesian General Election Commission website KPU Ubah Perolehan Kursi Parpol di DPR (KPU Changes Allocations of Parties' seats in the DPR (15 May 2009)) Access date 2009-05-24 (indonesian)
  7. ^ The Jakarta Post 10 May 2009 JK-Wiranto officially declare partnership for upcoming elections
  8. ^ Surabaya Post online 24/1/09 Wiranto Tolak Jadi Cawapres (Wiranto refuses to be a vice-presidential candidate) Access date 2009-05-10 (Indonesian)


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