By Ananda Teresia
JAKARTA (Reuters) – Indonesia’s fifth-largest political party NasDem on Monday announced that it is backing outgoing Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan as its candidate for the 2024 presidential election.
Anies has consistently ranked among the top three possible contenders to lead the world’s third-largest democracy, according to opinion polls, alongside Central Java Governor Ganjar Pranowo and Defence Minister and ex-special forces general, Prabowo Subianto.
Nasdem Chairman Surya Paloh said he had spent months deliberating on the party’s preferred candidate and ultimately decided that Anies was the best choice.
Anies accepted the endorsement and said he was ready to “walk together” with the party, which in the 2019 parliamentary election won about 9% of the national vote.
At the time NasDem did not pass the required threshold to put forward a candidate alone, meaning it will have to form a coalition with other parties to formally nominate a candidate for 2024.
Presidential candidates are not required to officially register with the country’s election body until October next year. But with incumbent President Joko Widodo constitutionally barred from seeking a third term, intense jockeying is getting underway over who will next lead the world’s fourth most-populous country.
Elected as Jakarta governor in 2017, Anies faced criticism at the time for his perceived closeness to hardline Islamic groups.
Mass rallies held by those groups catalysed the downfall of Anies’ political rival and then-governor, Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, or “Ahok,” an ethnic Chinese, Christian politician who was later imprisoned on blasphemy charges for insulting Islam.
(Reporting by Ananda Teresia; Writing by Kate Lamb; Editing by Kanupriya Kapoor)