International
Dida Alangkara / AP

Jakarta Gov. Jokowi wins Indonesian election

Opponent, former Gen. Prabowo Subianto, withdrew from race, alleging widespread voter fraud

Jakarta Gov. Joko Widodo, who won the hearts of Indonesians with his common-man image, garnered 53 percent of the vote in Indonesia's presidential election, final results from the Election Commission showed Tuesday.

The numbers were released shortly after his opponent, former Gen. Prabowo Subianto, declared he was withdrawing from the contest, saying there was fraud during the election and that it was unfair and undemocratic.

Widodo, a former furniture maker known widely as "Jokowi," maintained a slim lead of about 4 percentage points in unofficial quick counts by polling agencies released after the July 9 election.

But Subianto, who has declared assets of $140 million and was on his third bid for the presidency, repeatedly claimed that polling firms with links to his campaign showed he was ahead. "We reject the 2014 presidential election, which is unlawful, and therefore we withdraw from the ongoing process," he said.

There were no immediate reports of violence. About 100 Subianto supporters held a peaceful protest some 300 yards from the Election Commission building in downtown Jakarta, chanting "Prabowo is the real president" and holding banners demanding that the commission stop cheating.

The building was surrounded by thousands of policemen to maintain security after a particularly nasty presidential campaign. It was the first election that pitted two candidates directly against each other since the Muslim majority country of 240 million emerged from the long and brutal Suharto dictatorship 16 years ago.

Supporters of both men used social media for personal attacks, and Subianto's supporters led a smear campaign against Widodo, spreading rumors he is not a Muslim.

The commission was to formally declare the winner later Tuesday evening.

Final results showed that Widodo won 70,997,859 votes, or 53.15 percent of the nearly 133 million valid ballots cast, while Subianto won 62,576,444 votes, or 46.85 percent.

Voter turnout was 70.7 percent.

The Associated Press

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