Presidential Election Maneuvering Begins in Indonesia -
[email protected] - Gmail (google.com)
<https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0/#inbox/FMfcgzGpGnDfZpgrpsrZGDGBDwbndsnD?compose=new>

Open in browser
<https://substack.com/app-link/post?publication_id=23934&post_id=61881413&utm_source=email>
Presidential Election Maneuvering Begins in Indonesia
<https://substack.com/redirect/2/eyJlIjoiaHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuYXNpYXNlbnRpbmVsLmNvbS9wL3ByZXNpZGVudGlhbC1lbGVjdGlvbi1tYW5ldXZlcmluZy1pbmRvbmVzaWE_dG9rZW49ZXlKMWMyVnlYMmxrSWpvMU5EZ3dNVEF3TENKd2IzTjBYMmxrSWpvMk1UZzRNVFF4TXl3aWFXRjBJam94TmpVMk5Ua3pORGc1TENKcGMzTWlPaUp3ZFdJdE1qTTVNelFpTENKemRXSWlPaUp3YjNOMExYSmxZV04wYVc5dUluMC56TzlrVXZrWEJ6QzBIcGxpenlxMW9OamhJZVdfS00wUkxSVDI0eVl6ZkdVIiwicCI6NjE4ODE0MTMsInMiOjIzOTM0LCJmIjp0cnVlLCJ1Ijo1NDgwMTAwLCJpYXQiOjE2NTY1OTM0ODksImlzcyI6InB1Yi0wIiwic3ViIjoibGluay1yZWRpcmVjdCJ9.W9_qAgl2r4YZBiEDSDhdtGboAeMSziTxhL8FVxIwA4Q?>
Political
parties jockey to build coalitions amid rumors of third Jokowi term

Our Correspondent
<https://substack.com/redirect/6c1aecb1-a172-4ad0-a256-c60560905225?u=5480100>

Jun 30

With more than a year and a half to go before February 2024 general
elections, Indonesia’s political parties are jockeying to form coalitions
to nominate presidential candidates to replace Joko Widodo, who has held
office since 2014 and who is the subject of speculation that his popularity
could make him a candidate for a third term.

Indonesians, however, are generally wary of extending the president’s term
despite his considerable popularity out of unappetizing remembrance of the
New Order government headed by the late strongman Suharto, who ruled for 34
years amid deepening corruption and stagnation. Jokowi has told his
ministers they should focus on work instead of speculating on extending the
presidential term. He recently announced that elections would be held on
February 14, 2024.

Former general and defence minister Prabowo Subianto, who has run three
times unsuccessfully, is trying again, reportedly with his Gerindra Party
in a coalition with the Islamist National Awakening Party. Central Java
Governor Ganjar Pranowo and Jakarta Governor Anies Baswedan have been
widely mentioned as potential candidates. In the Saiful Mujani Research and
Consulting (SMRC) survey, for example, 22.5 percent picked Ganjar, followed
by Prabowo at 17.5 percent, with Anies with 13.2 percent.

The NasDem Party, the nation's fourth largest, has officially announced
that it will nominate either Ganjar, Anies or the military commander Gen.
Andika Perkasa. But despite his prominent position as head of government in
the nation’s biggest megalopolis, Anies isn’t a member of any party and his
victory in the 2017 Jakarta gubernatorial election 2017 is remembered as a
result of the support of Islamic hardliner groups who exploited religious
and racial sentiments to block the former governor, an ethnic Chinese
Christian, on trumped-up charges of blaspheming the Quran.

Although surveys depict Ganjar as the strongest candidate, he is a member
of the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle, which may have another
candidate in the wings – Puan Maharani, the daughter of party chairwoman
Megawati Sukarnoputri, arguably the most powerful kingmaker in the country.
Puan Maharani was only chosen by 1.8 percent of the respondents.

Rumors have surfaced recently that Jokowi is supporting Ganjar, angering
the PDI-P top brass. Jokowi appeared to signal his support in front of
Ganjar and his volunteer group, Pro Jokowi or Projo, whose chairman at the
end of last month claimed 85 percent of Jokowi's supporters support Ganjar.
Thus, the possible conflict between Jokowi and Megawati could affect the
solidity of the party as a whole.

PDIP legislators in the House of Representative have strongly criticized
Jokowi and Ganjar for allegedly overstepping Megawati‘s authority although
she has yet to officially announce her choice. Jokowi and Megawati *(pictured
above)* recently appeared together in public to attempt to quash the
controversy, with Jokowi saying the two are like mother and son, although
"there is a difference between mother and child. That's only natural."

Megawati is the supreme PDI-P leader, determining party policies including
appointing candidates for regional head and president. She has led the
party since 1993 and was Indonesia’s president from 2001 to 2004, replacing
the ousted Abdurrahman Wahid. She twice ran for president in 2004 and 2009
but lost. She then chose Jokowi, a politician from outside the country's
dynastic elites, to run in 2014 and 2019 against Prabowo. PDI-P has
solidified its position as the country as the dominant party with nearly 20
percent of members in the House of Representatives.

Even though Jokowi is popular and has a strong support base, he is not the
chairman of any political party, which would give him the privilege of
determining which candidate the party would support. Megawati and PDIP have
backed him from the time he ran for regional head in his hometown of
Surakarta in 2005 until his rise to the top of presidential power.

The party has also supported Jokowi's son Gibran and his son-in-law Bobby
Nasution to become mayors in Surakarta and Medan respectively. Because of
this situation, Jokowi may not be free in determining which presidential
candidate he will support.

Arya Fernandes, who heads the Department of Politics and Social Change at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) said the
relationship between Jokowi, Megawati and PDIP is mutually beneficial.
Jokowi needs the support of the PDIP to smooth out government policies such
as dealing with the pandemic and construction of the new capital city in
Kalimantan, which he considers his signal goal. Conversely the party needs
Jokowi to pull in 2024 voters. CSIS research indicates the Jokowi effect
played a major role in drawing PDIP votes in the past two general elections.

PDIP leaders are upset by speculation on extending the Jokowi’s reign to
three terms, which is being echoed by palace circles, party leaders and his
rank-and-file supporters. Although he is a PDIP member, the party does not
support extending his potential term and wants the elections held as
scheduled.

*Three-Term Discourse*

The idea of extending the term and postponing elections has been around
since 2019 but it has picked up recent steam from cabinet ministers and
heads of parties supporting the government. In early June, a support group
named the Volunteer Front of President Jokowi (Bara JP) produced t-shirts
promoting the three-term concept and planned to distribute them to the
public ahead of the president's visit to Ende, East Nusa Tenggara (NTT),
but the plan failed.

The Projo support group is still pushing the idea. Regulations have not yet
been decided by the General Election Commission (KPU), meaning that at
least technically the idea is still alive. KPU member Idham Kholik said the
government had just disbursed Rp2.4 trillion of a total Rp8.06 trillion for
the 2024 general election budget. The finance ministry is reportedly unable
to disburse all the funds because it is waiting for election stage
regulations to be finalized.

Jok-Pro, another Jokowi advocacy group, says it actually wants the
presidential extension. Ahmad Qodari, an adviser to Jok-pro, says Jokowi
has never reprimanded the volunteers holding events supporting the
three-term discourse. "The (volunteers) should have been reprimanded if it
was not allowed at all," said Qodari.

Students, however, have demonstrated in opposition. The Executive Director
of Indonesian Political Indicators Burhanuddin Muhtadi said arguments that
the election should be postponed due to the pandemic, economic recovery,
and the construction of the new capital city are baseless. Economic growth
is improving, reaching 3.7 percent throughout 2021.

Various credible surveys show little public support for postponing the
election and allowing Jokowi to continue in office. The Indonesian Survey
Institute (LSI) survey released in early March 2022 showed that the
majority of people rejected the proposal or extending Jokowi’s term until
2027 for any reason. Around 68-71 percent of respondents turned down the
idea, either because of the Covid-19 pandemic, the economic slowdown or the
construction of the new capital city.

-- 
Anda menerima pesan ini karena Anda berlangganan grup "GELORA45" dari Google 
Grup.
Untuk berhenti berlangganan dan berhenti menerima email dari grup ini, kirim 
email ke [email protected].
Untuk melihat diskusi ini di web, kunjungi 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/gelora1945/CAGjSX2DdK%3DeCjw6MkyYGAbTsQ12cLVA34xMcK0-EGgrpF6NVSg%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to