Ladini, Malisa
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Sikap Politik Petani dalam Pilkada Kabupaten Semarang 2015 di Kelurahan Pringapus Kecamatan Pringapus Ladini, Malisa
Unnes Political Science Journal Vol 1 No 1 (2017): January
Publisher : Universitas Negeri Semarang

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.15294/upsj.v1i1.19853

Abstract

Political farmers in the elections of 2015 in Semarang Sub District Pringapus reflect developments in the political consciousness. This study aimed to political attitudes of farmers in the village Pringapus in the elections of 2015 to the Semarang political parties/coalition of political parties and candidates stretcher couple Cabup/regent. The study used a qualitative approach, the research background Pringapus Village, the focus of research in political attitudes of farmers towards political parties/coalition of political parties and candidates stretcher couple Cabup/regent, the primary data source for farmers, Team Winning Candidate 1, Candidate 2 Success Team, secondary data is written and photographs data collection techniques of observation, documentation, interviews with technical validity of the data triangulation techniques, triangulation, data analysis techniques interactions. The results that the farmers in the village Pringapus active in Farmers have a political stance against the political parties/coalition of political parties and candidates stretcher couple Cabu/regent in the elections of 2015 Semarang better knowledge and understanding of the political parties Cabup/regent, his emotions like the political parties and Cabup/regent, and conative choose political parties and Cabup/cawabup cares farmers, but the farmers who are not active in the farmers Group has a political stance worse, yet his knowledge and understanding of the political parties Cabup/regent, his emotions did not like the performance of political parties and Cabup/regent, conative and confusion. Saran, the need for a more intense approach of Political Parties and Candidates Regent/Vice Regent of the peasantry.
Adaptive Communication and Religious Inclusivity in the Electoral Defeat of a Long-Term Incumbent Ladini, Malisa; Yuwono, Teguh; Yuwanto
MUHARRIK: Jurnal Dakwah dan Sosial Vol. 8 No. 2 (2025): Muharrik: Jurnal Dakwah dan Sosial
Publisher : Fakultas Dakwah Institut Agama Islam Sunan Giri Ponorogo

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Abstract

This study analyzes the unexpected electoral defeat of a three-term incumbent in the 2024 Provincial Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat Daerah (DPRD) race in Central Java’s Electoral District 4, an area historically characterized by strong Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) socioreligious dominance and long-term Partai Kebangkitan Bangsa (PKB) electoral stability. While existing research on Indonesian local politics underscores incumbency advantage rooted in ritual embeddedness, symbolic authority, and organizational loyalty, such explanations are insufficient to capture the challenger’s unprecedented rise. This article addresses that gap by examining the relational, communicative, and symbolic mechanisms that reshaped voter preferences. Using a qualitative case-study design, the research draws on eighteen semi-structured interviews, participant observation in religious and community events, digital-content analysis, and official data from the General Elections Commission (Komisi Pemilihan Umum, KPU). The findings reveal that the incumbent experienced a substantive decline in symbolic authority due to reduced ritual visibility and diminishing emotional proximity, corresponding with an 8–12% decrease in vote share across key polling-station clusters. Conversely, the challenger constructed legitimacy through embodied service practices, adaptive political communication tailored to diverse audiences, and hybrid digital–offline visibility that amplified everyday interactions into credible public narratives. The study concludes that voter behavior in NU-based rural constituencies is undergoing a cultural reorientation in which sincerity, accessibility, and continuous moral presence now outweigh structural party advantages. These insights expand theoretical discussions on personalization, symbolic legitimacy, and relational politics in Indonesia’s decentralized electoral landscape, providing a more nuanced understanding of how challengers can penetrate entrenched socioreligious strongholds.