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United Development Party - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Political party in Indonesia
United Development Party
Partai Persatuan Pembangunan
AbbreviationPPP/P3
General ChairmanMuhamad Mardiono
Secretary-GeneralTaj Yasin Maimoen
FoundersMohammad Syafaat Mintaredja
Idham Chalid
Anwar Tjokroaminoto
Rusli Halil [id]
Masjkur[1]
Founded5 January 1973; 53 years ago (1973-01-05)
Merger ofNU
Parmusi
PSII
Perti
HeadquartersMenteng, Central Jakarta
Youth wingKaaba Youth Movement
Membership (2022)444,496[2]
Ideology
  • Pancasila[3]
  • Islamism[4]
  • Pan-Islamism[5][6]
    Islamic traditionalism[7]
  • Religious conservatism[3]
  • Economic liberalism[8]
  • Faction:
  • Religious pluralism[7]
Political positionRight-wing[9][10]
Faction:
Centre-right[11]
National affiliationAdvanced Indonesia Coalition
(2024–present)[12]
Alliance of Parties
(2023–2024)
United Indonesia Coalition
(2022–2023)
Onward Indonesia Coalition
(2018–2022)
Great Indonesia Coalition
(2014–2018)
Red-White Coalition
(2014)
Joint Secretariat
(2009–2014)
People's Coalition
(2004–2009)
National Coalition
(2004)
Central Axis
(1999–2004)
SloganBergerak Bersama Rakyat
(Moving with the People)
AnthemMars PPP
(PPP March)
Ballot number17
DPR seats
0 / 580
DPRD I seats
83 / 2,372
DPRD II seats
850 / 17,510
Website
ppp.or.id
  • Politics of Indonesia
  • Political parties
  • Elections

The United Development Party (Indonesian: Partai Persatuan Pembangunan, PPP or P3), is one of the Islamist political parties in Indonesia. At the time of its declaration on January 5, 1973, this party was the result of a merger of four religious parties, namely the Nahdlatul Ulama Party (NU), the Islamic Education Movement (PERTI), the Indonesian Islamic Union Party (PSII), and the Indonesian Muslims' Party (PARMUSI). The first chairman at that time was Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja.[1] The merger of the four religious parties was aimed at simplifying the party system in Indonesia in facing the first general election during the New Order in 1973. Because the party's distinctive logo was associated with Islamic religious politics, the PPP was popularly known as the Ka'bah Party.[4][5][6][7]

History

[edit]
Party head office on Jalan Diponegoro, Menteng, Jakarta

Origins

[edit]

Ten political parties participated in the 1971 legislative election, a number that President Suharto considered to be too many. Suharto wished that political parties be reduced to just two or three and that the parties should be grouped based on their programs.

The basis for the merger that would result in the birth of the PPP was a coalition of the four Islamic Parties in the People's Representative Council (DPR) called the United Development Faction. This faction consisted of Nahdatul Ulama (NU), the Indonesian Muslims' Party (PARMUSI), the Indonesian Islamic Union Party (PSII) and the Islamic Education Movement (PERTI).

The United Development Party (PPP) was founded by

  • Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja, Chairman of the Indonesian Muslims' Party (PARMUSI)
  • Idham Chalid, Chairman of Nahdlatul Ulama (NU)
  • Anwar Tjokroaminoto, Chairman of the Indonesian Islamic Union Party (PSII)
  • Rusli Halil, Chairman of the Islamic Education Movement (PERTI)
  • Masjkur, Chairman of the United Development in the House of Representatives (DPR) faction.[1]

The leaders of four Islamic parties participating in the 1971 election and the head of the United Development Group, a faction of the four Islamic parties in the House of Representatives (Indonesia) (DPR).

With encouragement by the Government, officials from all four parties had meetings with each other and after finding some common ground, merged the four Islamic parties in Indonesia into the United Development Party on 5 January 1973. Despite this formal merging of the parties however, internal PPP politics under the Suharto government were dominated by the differing priorities of the original groups that formed the party.

Opposition to the New Order

[edit]
The party's logo from 1973 to 1985
The party's logo from 1982 to 1998
The party's logo from 1998 to 2021 and 2023 to present

In the mid-1970s, popular support for Suharto's regime was rapidly waning. When Suharto had seized power with a bloody military coup in 1965 and ousted President Sukarno, the Islamic groups had supported Suharto and aided in persecuting his political opponents. But as the regime had become corrupt and even more authoritarian, this alliance began to crumble. As the 1977 legislative election approached, many began to seek other options to vote for aside from the government-backed Golkar.

Worried that the PPP might win the elections, Suharto played on the fears of the people by having the military arrest a group of people who claimed to be associated with the Jihad Commando (Komando Jihad). With this some people became worried that to vote for the PPP and its Islamic leaning would mean expressing support the Jihad Commando and in a government growing increasingly authoritarian, many simply refused to be associated with the wrong side. Golkar would go on to win the legislative elections with 62% with the PPP coming second with 27% of the votes.

The PPP however, would not sit back and accept defeat. At the 1978 MPR General Session, PPP member Chalid Mawardi launched a scathing criticism of Suharto's regime. Mawardi accused the Government of being anti-Muslim, complained about the government's violent crackdown of dissent, and alleged that the 1977 legislative election was won because of electoral fraud.[13] PPP members also conducted a mass walkout when Suharto referred to religions as "streams of beliefs".

The PPP seemed to have cemented itself a status as the strongest opposition party. It would not last long however. In 1984, NU, under its chairman, Abdurrahman Wahid withdrew from the PPP, severely weakening it. The PPP vote share fell from almost 28% in the 1982 legislative election to 16% in the 1987 legislative election, the PPP was also forced by the government to replace its ideology of Islam with the national ideology of Pancasila and to stop using Islamic symbols. As a result, the party replaced its logo showing the Kabah shrine in Mecca with a star.[14] The symbol was identical to the first principle of Pancasila, Ketuhanan yang Maha Esa (Belief in the One Supreme God).

1988 MPR general session

[edit]

At the 1988 MPR General Session, Jailani Naro, the PPP Chairman, was nominated as vice president. Suharto, who had been elected to the presidency for a fifth term at the aforementioned General Session, intervened. He cited a decision that the MPR made in 1973 that one of the criteria for a vice president was that he should be able to work with the president. Suharto also conducted discussions with Naro and convinced him to withdraw the nomination.

What Naro did was unprecedented as both Suharto and his vice presidents had always been elected unopposed. The problem this time was Suharto's choice for vice president, Sudharmono. Suharto's choice had caused a rift between him and his most loyal ally, ABRI. Many within ABRI did not like Sudharmono because he spent more time behind a desk (Sudharmono was a military attorney) than as a field officer. Seeing a gap to exploit, Naro nominated himself, possibly with the private support of ABRI who, in public, had shown support for Sudharmono.

The PPP in the Reform era

[edit]
United Development Party rally in Jakarta, 24 April 1997
Party logo used briefly from 2021 to 2023

The PPP continued as the second biggest party out of the three allowed in the New Order. In May 1998, after Suharto's fall, the PPP returned to its Islamic ideology and prepared itself for the 1999 legislative election, where it won 11% of the vote.

In the 1999 MPR General Session, the PPP was part of the Central Axis, a political coalition of Muslim parties which was formed by MPR Chairman, Amien Rais to counter the dominance of Megawati Sukarnoputri's Indonesian Democratic Party-Struggle (PDI-P). The PDI-P had won the legislative election and Megawati was expected to win the presidency. However, the MPR was still at this stage responsible for electing the president and vice president, and the Muslim parties in the Central Axis did not want a female president. Instead, they nominated and successfully secured the election of Abdurrahman Wahid as president. In the vice-presidential election, PPP Chairman Hamzah Haz ran against Megawati and was defeated.

The PPP was the first of Wahid's political allies to become disillusioned with him. The PPP's main problem with Wahid was his visit to Israel and the suggestion that he was willing to establish diplomatic relations with that nation. Hamzah who served in Wahid's cabinet as Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare, immediately resigned from his position just a month after Wahid had appointed him to it. Many other Wahid allies would follow and in July 2001, the PPP would join in removing Wahid from the presidency and naming Megawati as the president. Hamzah was then elected as vice president after defeating Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Akbar Tanjung in the vice-presidential election.

2004 legislative election

[edit]

The PPP won 8.1% of the vote in the 2004 legislative election, a decrease from its 10.7% share of the vote in 1999, but enough to retain its place as the third-best represented party in the legislature, behind the PDI-P and Golkar.

2004 presidential election

[edit]

The PPP originally did not have a presidential candidate in mind for the 2004 presidential election. They had expected that Hamzah would be picked as Megawati's running mate and continue the Megawati/Hamzah President/Vice President partnership. Megawati however, chose NU Chairman Hasyim Muzadi as her running mate.

The PPP then continued to wait, still expecting that Hamzah Haz would be picked as a vice-presidential candidate. Finally, a day before the registration of presidential/vice-presidential candidates was closed, Hamzah moved forward and became the PPP's presidential candidate.[15] His running mate was Agum Gumelar, who served as Minister of Transportation in Megawati's Cabinet. Hamzah's presidential run was unsuccessful as he received only 3.1% of the vote and came fifth.

In August 2004, the PPP announced that it was forming a national coalition with the PDI-P, Golkar, the Reform Star Party (PBR) and the Prosperous Peace Party to back Megawati to win the presidential run-off against Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. Yudhoyono however would emerge victorious and the PPP would defect from the national coalition to Yudhoyono's camp. They were rewarded by being given cabinet places.

2007 party congress

[edit]

The PPP held its 6th National Congress in Jakarta from 30 January to 3 February 2007. On the last day of the Congress, Suryadharma Ali emerged as the new PPP Chairman to replace Hamzah. Suryadharma served as Minister of Cooperatives and State and Medium Enterprises in President Yudhoyono's Cabinet. He announced that he would continue as minister while concurrently holding the position of PPP Chairman.[citation needed]

2009 legislative election

[edit]

The party came sixth in the 2009 legislative election with 5.3 percent of the vote, winning 38 seats in the People's Representative Council.[16] Throughout the election, the party obtained votes from the elderly Muslim men throughout rural and urban area, inside and outside of Java.[17]

The party in the 2010s

[edit]

In the 2014 Indonesian legislative election, the PPP improved on its performance in the previous election winning 6.53% of the vote, and 39 seats in the legislature.[18] Five years later, in the 2019 Indonesian legislative election, the PPP share of the vote fell to 4.52%, and the number of seats it held in the legislature halved to 19.[19][20]

2014 General Election & Party Rift

[edit]

In the 2014 Indonesian legislative election, the PPP targeted 12% of the national vote[21] or 13-15% of the vote in the DPR.[22] However, PPP could only win 6.53% of the national vote and 39 seats in the DPR.[23] Internal conflict in determining the presidential candidate occurred again ahead of the 2014 presidential election. At that time, the General Chairman of the PPP Suryadharma Ali was present at the Gerindra Party campaign at the Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, Jakarta, on March 23, 2014. Suryadharma Ali gave a speech and supported Prabowo Subianto.[24] The presence of Suryadharma Ali at the Gerindra Party campaign was accused of being the cause of the PPP's failure to achieve the target of 12 percent of the vote in the legislative elections on April 9, 2014. On April 13, 2014, 26 of the 34 PPP Regional Leadership Councils (DPW) requested that the PPP Central Leadership Council hold a plenary meeting to hear Suryadharma Ali's accountability.

Not long after the demand for accountability was voiced, Suryadharma Ali on April 16, 2014, signed a letter of dismissal for the Deputy Chairman of the PPP Suharso Monoarfa and five elements of the PPP DPW leadership. Suharso was dismissed on the grounds of managing his wife's nomination process as a legislative candidate, while the five elements of the PPP DPP leadership were dismissed for managing the presidential election while cadres were fighting for votes in the legislative elections.[24] After the dismissal, Suryadharma declared his support for Prabowo at the PPP DPP office and was responded to by the Deputy Chairman of the PPP DPP Emron Pangkapi who emphasized that his party's coalition with Gerindra was illegal.[24] To resolve the problem, the PPP held a national leadership meeting on April 19–20, 2014 which resulted in the decision to temporarily dismiss Suryadharma Ali as chairman.[24] However, in the end, the internal conflict ended peacefully after Suryadharma apologized[24] and the PPP officially supported Prabowo Subianto on May 12, 2014.[25] The PPP had proposed Suryadharma Ali as a vice presidential candidate Prabowo[26] but Prabowo chose Hatta Rajasa as his vice president.

Brief Conflict & the 2024 Election

[edit]

Following the conflict between the Djan Faridz and Romahurmuziy camps, internal party conflict has resurfaced. This started on August 15, 2022, where Suharso Monoarfa made a controversial statement regarding the kiai's 'envelope'.[27] Although Suharso Monoarfa has apologized, this statement is considered controversial because it is considered insulting to Islamic boarding schools and kiai, resulting in protests demanding Suharso Monoarfa to resign as the general chairman of the PPP.[28][29][30] This controversial statement was also opposed by PPP cadres because it was considered to threaten the party's existence for the 2024 election contest and PPP cadres demanded that Suharso Monoarfa resign if he did not want to be dishonorably discharged.[31][32] On September 3–5, 2022, PPP held a national working conference (Mukernas) in Serang, Banten which determined the dismissal of Suharso Monoarfa as general chairman and the appointment of Muhammad Mardiono as acting general chairman for the remainder of the 2020–2025 term.[33] Suharso Monoarfa actually fought back against the decision and mobilized loyalist cadres to cancel the decision.[34] Political experts assess This conflict is different because the previous conflict was related to political direction while the conflict between Suharso Monoarfa and Muhammad Mardiono occurred because of a slip of the tongue and assessed that this conflict would only last a short time.[35][36]

Ahead of the 2024 elections, the United Development Party (PPP) formed the United Indonesia Coalition (KIB) together with Golkar and the National Mandate Party (PAN) on May 12, 2022.[37] The word "Bersatu" has a philosophy, namely Beringin (Golkar), Surya (PAN), and Baitullah (PPP), while the three are symbols of each political party that founded the coalition.[38] PPP is also strengthened by the joining of Sandiaga Uno as a party member.[39] However, on April 26, 2023, PPP nominated Ganjar Pranowo, joining the coalition supporting PDI-P.[40] Initially, PPP nominated Sandiaga Uno as a vice presidential candidate to accompany Ganjar[41] and tried to invite the United Indonesia Coalition to support Ganjar Pranowo.[42] However, Golkar and PAN supported Prabowo Subianto and formed Indonesia Onward Coalition with Great Indonesia Movement Party.[43]

PPP's Failure to Enter the House of Representatives in the 2024 Election

[edit]

In the Indonesian legislative election 2024, for the first time the PPP party's votes decreased significantly and ultimately the PPP party was unable to pass into the DPR-RI.[44] The great-grandson of the founding father and first chairman of the United Development Party (PPP),[45] Alvaro Rafi Syafaat Mintaredja or better known as Alvaro Mintaredja, was seen to be active again representing the family in PPP since 2025 after the party founded by his great-grandfather who is Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja did not pass into the House of Representatives (Indonesia) (DPR) in 2024 Indonesian Legislative Election for the first time in history.[46] He was also seen with President Jokowi at the wedding of President Abdurrahman Wahid's nephew, who is a close relative of the Mintaredja family.[47] Gus Dur or Abdurrahman Wahid is also known for the founder of National Awakening Party (PKB).[48] and hoped that with Alvaro Mintaredja and the active participation of Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja Family, United Development Party (PPP) could return to Senayan (DPR) again in 2029. As is known, the first child of Mohammad Syafa’at Mintaredja, namely Evac Syafruddin Mintaredja, decided not to follow in his father's footsteps and chose to start his career from the bottom he become the Head of the Media Bureau at the Ministry of State Secretariat under Vice President Jusuf Kalla.[49] Evac's son, Arie Syafriandi Mintaredja also chose to become an entrepreneur, down to the 4th generation, Alvaro Rafi Syafaat Mintaredja. Sandiaga Uno, who is a new PPP member, also expressed his concern and apologized for this incident and asked all members of PPP to remain enthusiastic.[50][51] Alvaro was born in Jakarta on January 4, 2004, his age is still very young. All administrators of the DPP, DPC, DPW, Senior Figures, and Party Elites support Alvaro Mintaredja to become the chairman of the United Development Party in the future, repeating the history of his great-grandfather.[52]

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[edit]
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Ideology

[edit]

After the fall of Suharto, PPP once again became an Islamist party in the early Post-Suharto era. Today it is considered a centre-right[53] to right-wing[9][54] nationalist Islamist party which conforms with Pancasila doctrine and no longer upholds sharia as a main goal.[citation needed]

Party platform

[edit]

The party's vision is to bring about a nation that is just, prosperous, moral and democratic and that upholds the law, respects human rights and that holds in high esteem the dignity of mankind and social justice based on the values of Islam. The party believes that religion (Islam) has an important role to play as a moral guidance and inspiration in the life of the nation. It is committed to improving the quality of democracy in Indonesia and respects freedom of expression, opinion and organization, the realization of good governance and the endeavor to preserve the unitary Republic of Indonesia based on Pancasila and the 1945 Constitution. It supports the concept of a people-based economic system, economic justice, the creation of jobs, the eradication of poverty, state control of sectors of the economy that have a controlling influence on the lives of the majority, a major role for state-owned companies, and economic independence.[55]

Chairman

[edit]
Main article: Chairman of the United Development Party

The founder of the United Development Party (PPP), or P3, Mohammad Syafa'at Mintaredja also served as its first Chairman from 5 January 1973 to 13 February 1978. In addition to the position of Chairman at the beginning of the establishment of the Ka'bah Party it also had a Party Presidium consisting of Idham Chalid as Party President, Mohammad Syafa'at Mintaredja, Thayeb Mohammad Gobel, Rusli Halil and Masjkur each as Party Vice President.

List

[edit]
  • Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja (1973–1978)
  • Jailani Naro (1978–1989)
  • Ismail Hasan Metareum (1989–1998)
  • Hamzah Haz (1998–2007)
  • Suryadharma Ali (2007–2014)
  • Muhammad Romahurmuziy (2014–2019)
  • Suharso Monoarfa (2019–2022)
  • Muhamad Mardiono (acting; 2022–present)

Election results

[edit]

Legislative election results

[edit]
Election Ballot number Total seats won Total votes Share of votes Seat change Outcome of election Party leader
1971 N/A
94 / 360
14,833,942[note 1] 27.11%[56] Increase94 seats Opposition Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja
1977 1
99 / 360
18,743,491 29.29%[57] Increase5 seats Opposition Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja
1982 1
94 / 360
20,871,880 27.78%[57] Decrease5 seats Opposition Jailani Naro
1987 1
61 / 400
13,701,428 15.97%[57] Decrease33 seats Opposition Jailani Naro
1992 1
62 / 400
16,624,647 17.01%[57] Increase1 seat Opposition Ismail Hasan Metareum
1997 1
89 / 400
25,340,028 22.43%[57] Increase27 seats Opposition Ismail Hasan Metareum
1999 9
58 / 500
11,329,905 10.71%[57] Decrease31 seats Governing coalition Hamzah Haz
2004 5
58 / 550
9,248,764 8.15%[57] Steady Governing coalition Hamzah Haz
2009 24
38 / 560
5,544,332 5.32%[57] Decrease20 seats Governing coalition Suryadharma Ali
2014 9
39 / 560
8,157,488 6.53%[58] Increase1 seat Governing coalition Suryadharma Ali
2019 10
19 / 575
6,323,147 4.52%[59] Decrease20 seats Governing coalition Suharso Monoarfa
2024 17
0 / 580
5,878,708 3.87% Decrease19 seats Governing coalition[60] Muhamad Mardiono
  1. ^ Total vote for the NU, Perti, PSII and Parmusi, which were fused into the PPP in 1973

Presidential election results

[edit]
Election Ballot number Pres. candidate Running mate 1st round
(Total votes)
Share of votes Outcome 2nd round
(Total votes)
Share of votes Outcome
2004 5 Hamzah Haz Agum Gumelar 3,569,861 3.01% Eliminated Runoff[61]
2009 2 Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono Boediono 73,874,562 60.80% Elected
2014 1 Prabowo Subianto[62] Hatta Rajasa 62,576,444 46.85% Lost
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

Note: Bold text indicates the party member

See also

[edit]
  • flagIndonesia portal
  • List of Islamic political parties

Famous figures in the United Development Party

[edit]
  • Mohammad Syafa'at Mintaredja — Founder and First Chairman (1973—1978)[63]
  • Hamzah Haz — Vice President of Indonesia (2001—2004)[64]
  • Maimun Zubair — Muslim Leader [65]
  • Sandiaga Uno — Minister of Tourism and Creative Economy (2020-2024)[66]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "PPP dalam Lintasan Sejarah" (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2014-09-02.
  2. ^ "Info Pemilu - Partai Persatuan Pembangunan". Komisi Pemilihan Umum RI. 22 December 2022. Retrieved 2023-01-09.
  3. ^ a b Bulkin, Nadia (2013-10-24). "Indonesia's Political Parties". Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Archived from the original on 2016-11-22. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  4. ^ a b King, Blair A. (2011). "Chapter 4. Government and Politics". In Frederick, William H.; Worden, Robert L. (eds.). Indonesia: A Country Study. Area handbook series, 39. Library of Congress, Federal Research Division (6th ed.). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 263, 271–273. ISBN 978-0-8444-0790-6.
  5. ^ a b Al-Hamdi, Ridho (2013). Partai politik Islam: Teori dan praktik di Indonesia [Islamic political parties: Theory and practice in Indobesia] (PDF) (in Indonesian). Yogyakarta: Graha Ilmu. ISBN 978-602-262-049-5.
  6. ^ a b Al-Hamdi, Ridho (February 2017). Moving towards a Normalised Path: Political Islam in Contemporary Indonesia. Jurnal Studi Pemerintahan (Journal of Government & Politics). Vol. 8 No. 1, pp. 53, 56-57, 62.
  7. ^ a b c d Yuniarto, Topan (2022-01-05). "Partai Persatuan Pembangunan" [United Development Party]. Kompaspedia (in Indonesian). Kompas. Retrieved 2024-03-11.
  8. ^ "Ketum PPP Beberkan Cara Agar RI Jadi Negara Maju di 2045, Apa Saja?".
  9. ^ a b Aspinall, Edward; Fossati, Diego; Muhtadi, Burhanuddin; Warburton, Eve (24 April 2018). "Mapping the Indonesian political spectrum". New Mandala. Retrieved 2021-06-17. Cite error: The named reference "Is it left or right-wing?" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  10. ^ Hardjowirogo, Jono (2018). Noto of Java Iii The End of Day. Xlibris US. p. The descent of chaos. ISBN 9781984521460.
  11. ^ "Partai Persatuan Pembangunan". Parlemen Indonesia. Archived from the original on August 23, 2021. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
  12. ^ "Prabowo: PPP Resmi Gabung KIM, Siap Dukung Pemerintahan Saya". cnnindonesia.com. Retrieved 2025-09-25.
  13. ^ Elson, Robert (2001). Suharto: A Political Biography. UK: The Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. p. 225. ISBN 0-521-77326-1.
  14. ^ Schwarz, Adam (1994). A Nation in Waiting: Indonesia in the 1990s. Allen & Unwin. p. 172. ISBN 0-521-77326-1.
  15. ^ "Semangat Agum, Keraguan Hamzah (Agum's Enthusiasm, Hamzah's Doubts)". Tempo (in Indonesian). Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
  16. ^ "KPU Ubah Perolehan Kursi Parpol di DPR (KPU Changes Allocations of Parties' seats in the DPR)". Indonesian General Election Commission (in Indonesian). 14 May 2009. Archived from the original on 2014-10-06.
  17. ^ Hwang, Julie Chernov. (2014). “Patterns of normalization: Islamist parties in Indonesia”, in Quinn Mecham and Julie Chernov Hwang (Eds.), Islamist parties and political normalization in the Muslim world. Philadelphia:University of Pennsylvania Press. p.68. ISBN 9780812246056
  18. ^ Robby Leo Agust; Kadar Setyawan; Sahruni Hasna Ramadhan; Amir A. Gofur; Nurul Agustina (eds.). "Buku Data & Infografik Pemilu Anggota DPR RI & DPD RI 2014" [2014 DPR & DPD Membership Elections Data & Infographic Book] (in Indonesian). General Elections Commission. pp. 31–32.
  19. ^ BeritaSatu Team; Telly Nathalia (21 May 2019). "Jokowi Wins Re-Election, PDI-P Wins Most Seats". Jakarta Globe.
  20. ^ Nur Azizah (1 October 2019). "575 DPR Members Inaugurated". medcom.id.
  21. ^ TNR, Yandi M. rofiyandi. "PPP Targets 12 Percent of the 2014 Election Vote". Tempo. Retrieved 2024-03-10.
  22. ^ Aryono, Ahmad Mufid (March 11, 2013). "2014 ELECTION: PPP ... 15% of Seats in Parliament". Solo Pos.
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  30. ^ developer, mediaindonesia.com. "Hundreds of Santri Demonstrate at Horse Statue, Urge Jokowi to Dismiss Suharso Monoarfa". Media Indonesia (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  31. ^ Farisa, Fitria Chusna (2022-08-26). "Suharso's "Kiai Envelope" Polemic Considered to Threaten PPP's Existence in the Election 2024". Kompas (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  32. ^ developer, mediaindonesia.com. "FKPP Demands Suharso Monoarfa Resign as PPP General Chairman". mediaindonesia.com (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  33. ^ Guritno, Tatang; Santosa, Bagus (2022-09-05). "Suharso Monoarfa Dismissed from General Chairman PPP". Kompas (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  34. ^ detikcom, Team. "Suharso's Counterattack Cancels Acting PPP General Chair Mardiono". detiknews (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-03-24.
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  36. ^ Sidik, Farih Maulana. "PPP Considered to be Experimenting After Mardiono Suharso Coup Monoarfa". detiknews (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-03-24.
  37. ^ "Golkar, PPP, and PAN Announce Official Name of the Indonesian Coalition United". CNN Indonesia. Jakarta. 2022-05-13.
  38. ^ Rakha Arlyanto Darmawan (2022-05-12). "Golkar-PAN-PPP Agree to Form 'Three United' Coalition in the 2024 Election". Detik.com. Jakarta.
  39. ^ detikNews, Team. "Sandiaga Uno Officially Becomes PPP Cadre, Honorable Position Prepared". Detik (in Indonesian). Retrieved 2024-03-24.
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  47. ^ "Dihadiri Presiden hingga Para Menteri, Intip Momen Pernikahan Putri Ipang Wahid yang Curi Perhatian".
  48. ^ "Sempat Enggan, Ini Alasan Gus Dur Dirikan PKB Nomor Urut 1 di Pemilu 2024".
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  50. ^ "PPP Tak Lolos ke Parlemen, Sandiaga: Saya Minta Maaf".
  51. ^ "Keluarga Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja, Pendiri Partai Persatuan Pembangunan (PPP)".
  52. ^ "Sosok Alvaro Mintaredja, Cicit Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja, Pendiri Partai Ka'bah yang Curi Perhatian Netizen".
  53. ^ "Partai Persatuan Pembangunan - Parlemen Indonesia". Archived from the original on 2021-08-23.
  54. ^ Hardjowirogo, Jono (2018). Noto of Java Iii The End of Day. Xlibris US. p. The descent of chaos. ISBN 9781984521460.
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External links

[edit]
  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata (in Indonesian)
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United Development Party
Organization
  • Kaaba Youth Movement
  • Kaaba Youth Forces
  • Young Generation of Indonesian Development
  • Indonesian Muslim Brotherhood
Muktamar
  • 1st (1984)
  • 2nd (1989)
  • 3rd (1994)
  • 4th (1998)
  • 5th (2003)
  • 6th (2007)
  • 7th (2011)
  • 8th (2014)
Mukernas
  • 1st (2000)
  • 2nd (2017)
  • 3rd (2018)
Party leadership
Chairman
  • Mohammad Syafaat Mintaredja (1973–1978)
  • Jailani Naro (1978–1989)
  • Ismail Hasan Metareum (1989–1998)
  • Hamzah Haz (1998–2007)
  • Suryadharma Ali (2007–2014)
  • Muhammad Romahurmuziy (2016–2019)
  • Suharso Monoarfa (2019–2022)
  • Muhamad Mardiono (2022–)
General Secretary
  • Yahya Ubeid (1973–1984)
  • Mardinsyah (1984–1989)
  • Matori Abdul Djalil (1989–1994)
  • Tosari Widjaja (1994–1998)
  • Alimarwan Hanan (1998–2003)
  • Yunus Yosfiah (2003–2007)
  • Irgan Chairul Mahfiz (2007–2011)
  • Muhammad Romahurmuziy (2011–2015)
  • Arsul Sani (2016–2021)
  • Arwani Thomafi (2021–)
Merger
  • Nahdlatul Ulama
  • PSII
  • Perti
  • Parmusi
Fractions
  • Unity Party
  • Ulema National Awakening Party
  • Reform Star Party
  • National Awakening Party
  • National Mandate Party
See also
  • History
  • Party factions
  • Timeline
  • Conflict
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Indonesia Political parties in Indonesia
Represented in the national legislature
  • Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (110)
  • Golkar Party (102)
  • Gerindra Party (86)
  • NasDem Party (69)
  • National Awakening Party (68)
  • Prosperous Justice Party (53)
  • National Mandate Party (48)
  • Democratic Party (44)
Represented in regional legislatures
  • United Development Party (PPP)
  • People's Conscience Party (Hanura)
  • Indonesian Solidarity Party (PSI)
  • Perindo Party
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  • Nusantara Awakening Party (PKN)
  • Garuda Party
  • Gelora Party
  • Ummah Party (Ummat)
  • Labour Party (Buruh)
Represented only in Aceh legislature
  • Aceh Party (PA)
  • Aceh Just and Prosperous Party (PAS Aceh)
  • Aceh State Party (PNA)
  • Aceh Abode Party (PDA)
  • SIRA Party
Non-legislature parties
Regional
  • Aceh People's Party (PRA)
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  • Atjeh Green Party (PHA)
  • Gabthat Party
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National
  • Berkarya Party
  • Concern for the Nation Functional Party (PKPB)
  • Green Party of Indonesia (PHI)
  • Justice and Unity Party (PKP)
  • Indonesian Nahdlatul Community Party (PPNUI)
  • Indonesian National Party Marhaenism (PNI-M)
  • Indonesian People's Da'wah Party (PDRI)
  • Indonesian Students Party (PMI)
  • Indonesian Workers and Employers Party (PPPI)
  • Justice and Prosperous People Party (PRIMA)
  • Masyumi Reborn Party
  • National Front Party (Barnas)
  • New Indonesia Party of Struggle (PPIB)
  • People's Sovereignty Party (PKR)
  • Union of Independent People (SRI)
Former political parties
Pre-independence
  • Association of Political Organisations of the Indonesian People (PPPKI)
  • Catholic Party (Katolik)
  • Chung Hwa Hui
  • Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI)
  • Gerindo
  • Indische Party (IP)
  • Indonesian Fascist Party (PFI)
  • Indonesian Islamic Party (PII)
  • Indonesian Islamic Union Party (PSII)
  • Indonesian National Party (PNI)
  • Indonesian Political Federation (GAPI)
  • Insulinde
  • Paguyuban Pasundan
  • Parindra
  • Partai Tionghoa Indonesia
  • Partindo
Sukarno era
Independent
Indonesia
  • Acoma Party
  • Catholic Party (Katolik)
  • Chinese Indonesian Democratic Party (PDTI)
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  • Great Indonesia Unity Party (PIR)
  • Indonesian Christian Party (Parkindo)
  • Indonesian Islamic Union Party (PSII)
  • Indonesian Marhaen People's Union (Permai)
  • Indonesian National Party (PNI)
  • Indonesian Peasants Party (PTI)
  • Islamic Education Movement Party (PERTI)
  • Islamic Tharikah Unity Party (PPTI)
  • Islamic Victory Force (AKUI)
  • Labour Party (PB)
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  • League of Supporters of Indonesian Independence (IPKI)
  • Masyumi Party
  • Murba Party
  • Nahdlatul Ulama (NU)
  • National People's Party (PRN)
  • Party of the People of Free Indonesia (PRIM)
  • Socialist Party (PS)
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  • Socialist People's Party (Parsas)
  • Village People's Union (PRD)
Pre-integration
West New Guinea
  • Indonesian Irian Independence Party (PKII)
New Order
  • Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI)
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Reform era
  • Archipelago Republic Party (RepublikaN)
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  • Freedom Party (Merdeka)
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  • Indonesian National Populist Fortress Party (PNBK-I)
  • Indonesian Unity Party (PSI)
  • Indonesian Youth Party (PPI)
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  • National Sun Party (PMB)
  • Patriot Party
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  • People's Democratic Party (PRD)
  • Pioneers' Party (Pelopor)
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  • Unity Party (PP)
  • Portal:Politics
  • List of political parties
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Islam in Indonesia
Branches
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  • Old divisions
    • Abangan
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Major figures
Classic era
  • Muhammad Arsyad al-Banjari [id]
  • Nawawi al-Bantani [id]
  • Hamzah Fansuri
  • Yusuf al-Makassari
  • Malikussaleh
  • Ismail al-Khalidi al-Minangkabawi
  • Abdullah al-Misri
  • Padri
    • Tuanku Imam Bonjol
    • Tuanku Rao
    • Tuanku Tambusai
  • Abdus Samad al-Palimbani [id]
  • Wali Sanga
    • Sunan Ampel
    • Sunan Bonang
    • Sunan Drajat
    • Sunan Giri
    • Sunan Gunung Jati
    • Maulana Malik Ibrahim
    • Sunan Kalijaga
    • Sunan Kudus
    • Sunan Murya
  • Abdurrauf Singkil
  • Ali Mughayat Syah
  • Tuanku Nan Tuo
  • Burhanuddin Ulakan
  • Usman bin Yahya
National
Awakening era
  • Abdullah Ahmad
  • Abdul Karim Amrullah
  • Hasyim Asy'ari
  • Ahmad Dahlan
  • Tahir bin Jalaluddin
  • Muhammad Jamil Jambek
  • Mas Mansoer
  • Ahmad Khatib al-Minangkabawi
  • Haji Misbach
  • Sulaiman ar-Rasuli
  • Mohammad Roem
  • Rasuna Said
  • Agus Salim
  • Tjokroaminoto
Post-
independence
  • Ahmad Syafi'i Maarif
  • Azyumardi Azra
  • Abu Bakar Bashir
  • Idham Chalid
  • Djohan Effendi
  • Yasin al-Fadani
  • Abdullah Gymnastiar
  • Hamka
  • Wahid Hasyim
  • Kartosoewirjo
  • Nurcholish Madjid
  • Harun Nasution
  • Mohammad Natsir
  • Amien Rais
  • Muhammad Rizieq Shihab
  • Quraish Shihab
  • Ma'ruf Amin
  • Said Aqil Siradj
  • Abdul Somad
  • Abdurrahman Wahid
  • Yazid bin Abdul Qadir Jawas
  • Muhammad Luthfi bin Yahya
Organizations
Civil society
  • Alkhairaat
  • Campus Dakwah Institute
  • Hidayatullah
  • Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia
  • Indonesian Association of Muslim Intellectuals
  • Indonesia Institute of Islamic Dawah
  • Indonesian Islamic Propagation Council
  • Indonesian Mujahedeen Council
  • Indonesian Ulema Council
  • Al-Irshad Al-Islamiya
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  • Majelis Rasulullah
  • Muhammadiyah
    • Aisyiyah
  • Muslim Students' Association
  • Nahdlatul Ulama
    • GP Ansor
    • JATMAN
  • Nahdlatul Wathan
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  • PERTI
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  • Wahdah Islamiyah
Political parties
  • Crescent Star Party
  • Indonesian Nahdlatul Community Party
  • Masyumi Party
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  • Prosperous Justice Party
  • Ummah Party
  • United Development Party
Militia
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  • Darul Islam
  • Jamaah Ansharut Tauhid
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  • Laskar Jihad
  • Mujahidin Indonesia Timur
History
Pre-
independence
  • Spread of Islam in Indonesia
  • Ottoman expedition to Aceh
  • Wali Sanga
  • Islamic Kingdoms in Indonesia
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    • Banjar Sultanate
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  • Padri War
Post-
independence
  • Jakarta Charter
  • Petition of Fifty
  • Tanjung Priok massacre
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  • December 2016 Jakarta protests
Culture
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Education
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Movements
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By region
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