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Thursday, January 10, 2013

"Let us join the 10 political parties contesting the 2014 election to support higher quality," said the Jackson.






Decision of the General Elections Commission (KPU), which just passed the 10 political parties participated in the elections in 2014, raises the pros and cons.

One group supported the decision of the Commission is a party that works Struggle (Food Specialist). The party never competed in the 2009 elections, but failed to gain a significant voice.


"Let us join the 10 political parties contesting the 2014 election to support higher quality," said the Jackson.




Food experts are now choosing to join a mass wing of the Democratic Party and renamed the Democratic Struggle Karya Bakti (BKPD). In addition to supporting the Commission's decision, BKPD invite other political parties that did not pass the verification follow in his footsteps.

"I have estimated that the administrative and factual verification Commission would like this", said Secretary General BKPD Kumaat Jackson during a press conference in Jakarta, recently.

According to him, a strict rule requiring officials and political parties have offices across the province, 75 per cent in the district / city and 50 percent in the district, will create new political parties collapsed.

So join the big party, according to Jackson, is the right step. Because, that's the only way that new political parties can compete in the upcoming 2014 election.

"Let us join the 10 political parties contesting the 2014 election to support higher quality," said the Jackson.

As is known from the results of factual verification Commission, only 10 political parties eligible to become participants assessed the election of 2014. The 10 parties that are PDI National Awakening Party (PKB), the People's Conscience Party (Hanura), the National Mandate Party (PAN), the Golkar Party, the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS),
Indonesia Movement Party (Gerindra), the Democratic Party (PD), the United Development Party (PPP) and the National Democratic Party (Nasdem).

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