People's Conscience Party

Political party in Indonesia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The People's Conscience Party (Indonesian: Partai Hati Nurani Rakyat), better known by its abbreviation, Hanura, is a political party in Indonesia. It was established following a meeting in Jakarta on 13–14 December 2006 and first headed by former Indonesian National Armed Forces commander Wiranto.[6][7]

AbbreviationHanura
General ChairmanOesman Sapta Odang
Secretary-GeneralBenny Rhamdani
FounderWiranto
Quick facts Abbreviation, General Chairman ...
People's Conscience Party
Partai Hati Nurani Rakyat
AbbreviationHanura
General ChairmanOesman Sapta Odang
Secretary-GeneralBenny Rhamdani
FounderWiranto
Founded21 December 2006; 19 years ago (21 December 2006)
Split fromGolkar
HeadquartersJakarta
Student wingSapma Hanura (Hanura Student Unit)
Youth wingLasmura (Hanura Young Army)
Women's wingPerempuan Hanura (Hanura Women)
Srikandi Hanura (Hanura Sikhandi)
Membership (2022)362,891[1]
IdeologyPancasila
Secularism
Liberalism
Indonesian nationalism
Corporatism[2]
Political positionCentre[3]
National affiliation
AnthemMars Hanura
(Hanura March)
Ballot number10
DPR seats
0 / 580
DPRD I seats
42 / 2,372
DPRD II seats
486 / 17,510
Website
partaihanura.or.id
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The party lost its seats in the House of Representatives (DPR) after a poor performance in the 2019 general election.

Background

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 Golkar Party in 2006 and established Hanura, targeting voters who had supported him in 2004. The party conducted a door-to-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 2009 elections was 15 percent of the vote.[8]

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 had supported Golkar chairman Jusuf Kalla for the presidency, in which both parties lost out to the Indonesian Democratic Party-Struggle and the Democratic Party. Hanura chairman Wiranto was his vice-presidential candidate, despite Wiranto's previous statement that he would not settle for the vice-presidency.[9][10] Following cabinet reshuffle in July 2016, Wiranto was appointed as coordinating minister for politics, legal and security affairs, prompting the party to hold a convention to select Wiranto's successor as party chairman.[11]

In Indonesia's 2019 general election, Hanura won only 1.54% of the vote and lost its 16 seats in the national parliament.[12]

On 18 December 2019, Wiranto resigned as chairman of the Hanura Board of Trustees, saying he wanted to focus on his appointment as chairman of the Presidential Advisory Council. He denied having been pushed out of the party, but he acknowledged the party had suffered internal conflict and that he was not invited to a recent national conference.[13]

List of chairmen

More information Name, Period ...
Name Period
Wiranto 2006–2016
Oesman Sapta Odang 2016–present
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Election results

Legislative election results

More information Election, Ballot number ...
Election Ballot number Total seats won Total votes Share of votes Outcome of election Party leader
2009 1
17 / 560
3,925,620 3.77%[14] Increase 17 seats, Opposition Wiranto
2014 10
16 / 560
6,579,498 5.26%[15] Decrease 1 seat, Governing coalition Wiranto
2019 13
0 / 575
2,161,507 1.54%[16] Decrease 16 seats, Governing coalition Oesman Sapta Odang
2024 10
0 / 580
1,094,599 0.72% Steady Coalition supply[17] Oesman Sapta Odang
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Presidential election results

More information Election, Ballot number ...
Election Ballot number Pres. candidate Running mate 1st round
(Total votes)
Share of votes Outcome 2nd round
(Total votes)
Share of votes Outcome
2009 3 Jusuf Kalla Wiranto 15,081,814 12.41% Lost
2014 2 Joko Widodo[18] Jusuf Kalla 70,997,833 53.15% Elected
2019 1 Joko Widodo Ma'ruf Amin 85,607,362 55.50% Elected
2024 3 Ganjar Pranowo Mahfud MD 27,040,878 16.47% Lost
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References

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