http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/02/world/asia/graft-forces-indonesian-president-yudhoyono-to-take-party-helm.html?ref=asia&_r=0

News Analysis
Graft Forces Indonesian President to Take Party Helm
By JOE COCHRANE
Published: April 1, 2013 
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JAKARTA — Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is the first directly elected president in 
Indonesian history. And as he entered the last 18 months of his second and 
final five-year term in office Monday, he was set to become the country’s 
first-ever lame-duck leader. 

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Ferenc Isza/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is the first directly elected president in Indonesian 
history. 


But in the uncertain political atmosphere of Indonesia’s young democracy, it 
has not quite worked out that way. Mr. Yudhoyono, by all appearances, was 
thrust back into the center of the country’s political ring over the weekend, 
as he was named chairman of his governing Democratic Party by proclamation 
during an emergency congress in Bali, to replace a party leader felled by a 
corruption scandal. 
Party members and analysts said Mr. Yudhoyono, a retired army general under 
whose leadership Indonesia has continued its steady democratic transition — and 
today boasted one of the world’s best-performing economies — had little choice 
but to take the reins officially. Beset by multiple corruption scandals, the 
party was also facing a mid-April deadline to register candidates for 
legislative elections next year and would not have been able to do so without a 
chairman in place. 

“President Yudhoyono doesn’t want to be chairman of the party, but it’s an 
emergency situation,” said Ramadhan Pohan, an Indonesian lawmaker and deputy 
secretary general of the Democratic Party. “No one else can step in and do 
this. There is no Democratic Party without Yudhoyono.” 

That in itself may be a bigger problem. While Mr. Yudhoyono may merely be 
trying to salvage the political party that he and his wife founded in 2001, 
some analysts say he is only further cementing the tendency toward political 
cults of personality, which is the main downside to Indonesia’s democratic era 
after decades of military-backed authoritarian rule. Each of Indonesia’s main 
political parties is centered on one key leader, leaving little room for 
internal democratic debate, party platforms or even ideologies, beyond being 
“nationalist” or Islamic-based. 

“They invest in figures, not the mechanisms of modern political parties, to 
resolve problems,” said Philips J. Vermonte, head of the politics and 
international relations department at the Center for Strategic and 
International Studies in Jakarta. Mr. Vermonte said that while it made sense 
for Mr. Yudhoyono to take over the chairmanship of his party, “I don’t think 
it’s ideal for the political system because it depends again on one popular 
figure.” 

The party congress on Bali, which was televised live nationally, was held to 
replace Anas Urbaningrum, who resigned as the Democrats’ chairman in February 
after the independent Corruption Eradication Commission named him as a suspect 
in a huge scandal involving the construction of a national sports complex in 
West Java Province. 

Divided by infighting ahead of the one-day congress Saturday, with Mr. 
Urbaningrum’s supporters nearly mutinous and other party leaders plotting to 
become chairman and, presumably, improve their chances to become the Democrats’ 
presidential candidate in July 2014, party leaders opted to bypass an open vote 
and put forward only Mr. Yudhoyono’s name. 

Party leaders said the president had grudgingly accepted but said he would not 
serve beyond the election cycle next year. He also appointed an executive 
chairman to handle his party’s day-to-day business. 

A string of corruption scandals dating back to 2010 has seen the Democrats’ 
poll numbers drop into the single digits and has left the party without a 
viable presidential candidate from among its senior leadership, as Mr. 
Yudhoyono is barred by the Constitution from seeking a third term. Mr. 
Yudhoyono’s task is not only to turn around his party’s fortunes, but to 
protect his own legacy as a president who won two terms on a policy of zero 
tolerance for corruption in one of Asia’s most graft-ridden nations. 

“He had no option but to accept the leadership offer because if he doesn’t, the 
Democratic Party will sink like the Titanic,” said Burhanudin Muhtadi, senior 
researcher at the Indonesian Survey Institute. “I’m not sure if he can save it. 
But Yudhoyono is the only hope for the Democratic Party to recover.” 

It has been a steep fall from grace for the party, which won a leading 26 
percent of the seats in Indonesia’s 560-seat House of Representatives in April 
2009, followed by Mr. Yudhoyono’s landslide re-election that July. 

The party’s treasurer, Muhammad Nazaruddin, was sentenced to nearly five years 
in prison in 2012 for accepting money relating to construction contracts for 
the Ministry of Youth and Sports, while Andi Mallarangeng, the youth and sports 
minister and a Yudhoyono protégé, resigned last December after being named a 
suspect in the sports complex scandal. 

In January, the Democrat lawmaker Angelina Sondakh, a former Miss Indonesia, 
was sentenced to as long as five years in prison for illegally facilitating 
construction contracts for the youth and sports and education ministries. Last 
month, Mr. Yudhoyono’s youngest son, Edhie Baskoro Yudhoyono, the Democrats’ 
secretary-general, had to repeatedly deny that he received money in connection 
with the sports complex scandal after Mr. Urbaningrum implied as much during a 
television interview after resigning as party chairman. 

Despite his party’s scandals, Mr. Yudhoyono himself remains popular, with a job 
approval rating in the 50s, according to recent polls. There is hope within his 
party that the president can turn its fortunes around before the 2014 election 
season, partially because the anti-corruption commission has also recently made 
arrests and conducted raids on the offices of leaders of rival political 
parties, including the Golkar party and the Islamic-based Prosperous Justice 
Party. 

While Mr. Yudhoyono successfully ran twice as an anti-corruption presidential 
candidate in 2004 and 2009, graft is unlikely to be an election-year issue this 
time around because the top four political parties have all had members thrown 
in prison. Governance, social and even economic issues tend not to resonate 
among Indonesia’s electorate; voters tend to identify with political parties 
based on the personality of their top leader. 

Election campaigns in Indonesia are more like outdoor parties with live music 
and celebrity hosts; Mr. Yudhoyono used to famously croon love songs to crowds 
during campaign stops. 

Whatever his intent in accepting the chairmanship, analysts say Mr. Yudhoyono 
is only reinforcing the trend by leading his Democratic Party into an election 
season in which he is not even a candidate. 

“This can create a precedent for the next parties in power after 2014 that it’s 
O.K. if ministers and presidents continue to work as party leaders. It’s not 
about whether the president or those in power perform well or not,” said Mr. 
Vermonte, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. 


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