Indonesia plans to cap the usage of hard cash to burnish President Joko Widodo’s anti-graft image before elections next year. Authorities are discussing a draft bill that will limit cash transactions by individuals and companies to 100 million rupiah each day. Bambang Soesatyo, a key Indonesian lawmaker and speaker of parliament, told the Jakarta Post he would support the bill because cash curbs will help reduce vote-buying. The legislation would need to be ratified by parliament and approved by Widodo, known as Jokowi, for it to become law. The Financial Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre (PPATK) says it has discovered many suspicious transactions, both cash and electronic, carried out by candidates, election organizers and members of political parties that will participate in the 2018 simultaneous regional elections.