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Onward Indonesia Coalition
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| This article may be a rough translation from Indonesian. It may have been generated, in whole or in part, by a computer or by a translator without dual proficiency. Please help to enhance the translation. The original article is under "Bahasa Indonesia" in the "languages" list. |
If you have just labeled this article as needing attention, please add{{subst:Translation request|pg=Onward Indonesia Coalition |language=Indonesian |comments= }} ~~~~to the bottom of the WP:PNTCU section on Wikipedia:Pages needing translation into English. (April 2022) |
| Onward Indonesia Coalition Koalisi Indonesia Maju |
|---|
| KIM |
| Joko Widodo |
| Ma'ruf Amin |
| 10 August 2018 (2018-08-10) |
| 20 October 2024 (2024-10-20) |
| Great Indonesia CoalitionRed-White Coalition |
| United Indonesia CoalitionAdvanced Indonesia CoalitionCoalition of Change for UnityAlliance of Parties |
| Menteng, Jakarta, Indonesia |
| PancasilaJokowism |
| Big tent |
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| Indonesia Maju(Onward Indonesia) |
| 525 / 575 |
| 1,976 / 2,232 |
| 15,760 / 17,340 |
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The Onward Indonesia Coalition (Indonesian: Koalisi Indonesia Maju, abbrev: KIM ), formerly the Working Indonesia Coalition (Indonesian: Koalisi Indonesia Kerja, KIK), was an official political coalition in Indonesia that supported the presidential/vice presidential candidates Joko Widodo and Ma'ruf Amin in the 2019 presidential election. It was initially known as the Working Indonesia Coalition, founded in 2018. The coalition was later utilized as the government of President Joko Widodo from 2019 to 2024. It was dissolved on 20 October 2024.
Joko Widodo with the leaders of the Coalition of Cooperation of Government Supporting Parties (KP3) having dinner, July 2018. From left to right: Muhaimin Iskandar, Airlangga Hartarto, Megawati Sukarnoputri, Joko Widodo, Surya Paloh, Oesman Sapta Odang and Muhammad Romahurmuziy.
On 10 August 2018, Joko Widodo established the Working Indonesia Coalition (Indonesian: Koalisi Indonesia Kerja) as a competing force against Prabowo Subianto's Just and Prosperous Indonesia Coalition, which consisted of the Great Indonesia Movement Party, the Prosperous Justice Party, the National Mandate Party, the Democratic Party, Berkarya Party and Idaman Party, during the 2019 presidential election. The formation of the coalition was carried out in the declaration at Plataran Restaurant, Menteng, Central Jakarta. This continued the previous coalition, the Great Indonesia Coalition by Megawati Sukarnoputri.
Joko Widodo also formed his team to win himself as a presidential candidate named the National Campaign Team led by Erick Thohir. It was agreed that Ma'ruf Amin would be a candidate for vice president against Sandiaga Uno. Jokowi and Ma'ruf started registering their candidacy on 10 August 2018 together with the leaders of the coalition political parties. Jokowi wore a shirt that reads Bersih, Merakyat, Kerja Nyata ("Clean, Popular, Real Works") and departed from the Joang '45 Building to the General Elections Commission Building.
On 21 October 2019, Joko Widodo offered Gerindra to join his coalition. Then, he entered the names Prabowo Subianto and Edhy Prabowo as ministers in his cabinet. Gerindra Party officially joined the coalition on 23 October 2019. This was a disappointment for the people who had supported Prabowo as a presidential candidate. the National Mandate Party followed Gerindra to join the coalition on 25 August 2021.
| Name | Ideology | Position | Leader(s) | 2019 result | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PDI-P | Indonesian Democratic Party of StrugglePartai Demokrasi Indonesia Perjuangan | Marhaenism | Centre-left | Megawati Sukarnoputri | 19.33% | 128 / 575 | |
| Gerindra | Great Indonesia Movement PartyPartai Gerakan Indonesia Raya | National conservatism | Right-wing | Prabowo Subianto | 12.57% | 78 / 575 | |
| Golkar | Party of the Functional GroupsPartai Golongan Karya | Economic liberalism | Centre-right to right-wing | Bahlil Lahadalia | 12.31% | 85 / 575 | |
| NasDem | National Democratic PartyPartai Nasional Demokrat | Social liberalism | Centre to centre-left | Surya Paloh | 9.05% | 59 / 575 | |
| PKB | National Awakening PartyPartai Kebangkitan Bangsa | Islamic democracy | Centre | Muhaimin Iskandar | 9.69% | 58 / 575 | |
| Demokrat | Democratic PartyPartai Demokrat | Constitutionalism | Centre to centre-right | Agus Harimurti Yudhoyono | 7.77% | 54 / 575 | |
| PAN | National Mandate PartyPartai Amanat Nasional | Religious nationalism | Centre to centre-right | Zulkifli Hasan | 6.84% | 44 / 575 | |
| PPP | United Development PartyPartai Persatuan Pembangunan | Pan-Islamism | Centre-right to right-wing | Muhammad Mardiono | 4.52% | 19 / 575 | |
| Perindo | Indonesian Unity PartyPartai Persatuan Indonesia | Conservatism | Centre-right | Hary Tanoesoedibjo | 2.67% | 0 / 575 | |
| PSI | Indonesian Solidarity PartyPartai Solidaritas Indonesia | Progressivism | Centre-left to left-wing | Kaesang Pangarep | 1.89% | 0 / 575 | |
| Hanura | People's Conscience PartyPartai Hati Nurani Rakyat | Corporatism | Centre | Oesman Sapta Odang | 1.54% | 0 / 575 | |
| PBB | Crescent Star PartyPartai Bulan Bintang | Islamic democracy | Right-wing | Yusril Ihza Mahendra | 0.79% | 0 / 575 | |
| PKP | Justice and Unity PartyPartai Keadilan dan Persatuan | Secularism | Centre | Yussuf Solichien | 0.22% | 0 / 575 |
Joko Widodo, the Chairman of the Onward Indonesia Coalition.
| Election | Total seats won | Share of seats | Total votes | Share of votes | Outcome of election |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 349 / 575 | 60.69% | 86,801,597 | 62.01% | 12 seats (2014 result); Governing coalition |
PKB chairman Muhaimin Iskandar proposes postponing the 2024 general election and invites the leaders of coalition political parties with reasons for economic recovery. He said that the general election should be postponed a year or two after the presidential term ends in 2024. This statement was reinforced by the coordinating minister Luhut Binsar Panjaitan who claimed the existence of big data containing 110 million netizens who support the postponement of the election. PAN's Zulkifli Hasan and Golkar's Airlangga Hartarto said the same thing as Muhaimin said. They continued to urge all coalition party leaders to fulfill their wishes even though several political parties, such as PDIP, Gerindra, Nasdem and PPP, refused to postpone the election. Despite refusing to postpone the election, PSI is trying to push for an extension of the presidential term by supporting Jokowi's return as president.
Facing increasingly heated issues, President Joko Widodo stressed to his ministers not to make controversial statements related to postponing elections and extending the presidential term. In the cabinet, the ministers who proposed this were Bahlil Lahadalia, Luhut Binsar Panjaitan and Airlangga Hartarto. The public responded to their statements by holding large-scale demonstrations.
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