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Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Party-led ruling coalition will be left democrat party voters survey evidence to prove they refuse to increases in fuel oil.



Party-led ruling coalition will be left democrat party voters survey evidence to prove they refuse to increases in fuel oil.

The poll results Indonesian Survey Circle, as much as 86.6 percent of respondents rejected if the price of fuel oil increased government subsidized. Only 11.26 per cent agreed the increase and the rest, ie 2.14 per cent, did not answer.
The survey was delivered Adjie Alfaraby, LSI investigators, during a press conference at the Office of LSI in Jakarta, Sunday (03/11/2012).
The survey was conducted on 5-8 March 2012 against 440 randomly selected respondents. According Adjie, all respondents are given handset is programmed to answer the survey.
Adjie explained, the majority of respondents rejected in all segments of the economy, people's houses in village or city, gender, education level, political party supporters, or supporters of the presidential candidate who is now sticking.
The high resistance to fuel price increases were also seen in the previous two surveys LSI. Adjie said, amounted to 82.3 per cent of respondents reject the fuel price hike when suvei in 2005 and declined by 75.1 percent in 2008. "The most neglected is Premium price increases than Pertamax, Pertamax Plus, or diesel.'s Not uncommon for LSI based survey, 71.1 percent premium public use," said Adjie.
As reported, the government plans to raise fuel prices as of 1 April 2012. The Government has proposed subsidized fuel price increase to Rp 1,500 per liter in the 2012 draft budget.
In the 2012 Revised State Budget, the government proposed the Indonesian crude oil price assumption (ICP) pegged 105 U.S. dollars per barrel. However, given the freedom to ask the government to raise the price of gasoline and diesel if the development of the ICP reaches above 5 percent assumed in the Revised ICP 2012.



Rejection of rise in prices of fuel oil (BBM) taken by the government not only come from the constituent political parties which are outside the government. Rejection was also coming from voters who support the government's political parties, including the Democratic Party.
This is revealed in a survey of the Indonesian Survey Circle (LSI) on the effects of electoral politics the government policy to increase fuel prices. The survey of 1,200 respondents conducted at 18 to June 20, 2013 with a margin of error of 2.9 percent. The result, a majority of voters support parties that reject the fuel price hike is precisely the policy.
"As many as 77.56 percent of Democratic voters reject the fuel price hike. While 80.81 percent of Golkar voters also rejected the fuel price hike," said researcher LSI, Adjie Alfaraby, in a press conference at the Office of LSI, Rawamangun, East Jakarta, Sunday (23/6 / 2013).
Adjie rate, this condition is very alarming because a political party was formed as an extension of the aspirations of the people in parliament. However, the fuel price hike would indicate the gap between voters and political parties in the legislature.
"This suggests a gap between the aspirations of the party attitude, refused but supportive, the irony of our public policy," he said.
Here are the results of a survey of voters LSI political party coalition government that refused to hike fuel prices:
Democrats: 77.56 percent reject the fuel price hike.
Golkar voters: 80.81 percent reject the fuel price hike.
PPP voters: 82.06 percent reject the fuel price hike.
Voters PKB: 85.65 percent reject the fuel price hike.
PAN: 66.21 percent reject the fuel price hike.
Voters MCC: 82.56 percent reject the fuel price hike.

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