Overtaken By AMIN In Survey, Chairman Of TPN Ganjar-Mahfud Will Focus On Doing This
JAKARTA - The head of the Ganjar-Mahfud National Winning Team (TPN), Arsjad Rasjid, said he would do a number of things after the pair number three was overtaken by the number one pair, Anies Baswedan-Muhaimin Iskandar or AMIN in the survey.It is known, the results of a survey from the Indonesia Political Opinion (IPO) revealed that AMIN's electability has now overtaken Ganjar-Mahfud. It was stated that the pair most chosen by respondents were Prabowo Subianto-Gibran Rakabuming Raka with 36.2 percent; Anies Baswedan-Cak Imin 34.1 percent; and Ganjar-Mahfud 27.1 percent."(What TPN will do in the future, red) we focus on introducing the figures of Mas Ganjar and Prof Mahfud," Arsjad told VOI when asked about the results of the survey, Tuesday, November 21.Not only that, Arsjad said his team would also explain the ideas brought by the Ganjar-Mahfud pair. So, the public knows both of them better and will give their votes during the election."Then (we, ed) explain the ideas, vision and mission, and programs," said the inactive Chairman of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KADIN).The IPO took samples from 1,400 respondents using the multistage random sampling method and a margin of error of approximately 2.50 percent with a confidence level of 95 percent. This survey was submitted to the public on Monday, November 20 yesterday.It was stated in this survey, if Prabowo is not paired, he will get the highest electability of 37.5 percent. Meanwhile, Anies occupied the next position at 32.7 percent and Ganjar was at the lowest, namely 28.3 percent.
This position did not change when the three presidential candidates were combined with their vice presidential candidates. However, Prabowo's electability decreased to 36.2 percent when paired with Gibran, Ganjar decreased to 27.1 percent when paired with Mahfud MD.Meanwhile, Anies Baswedan's electability has increased. If paired with Cak Imin, the number of respondents who chose him reached 34.1 percent.