Jan-Mar 2005 

The distraction is over
Elections do nothing to eliminate sources of social tension

Max Lane

The Indonesian presidential elections took place on 20 September. Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono, or SBY, was declared the winner by the General Elections 
Commission on 4 October. He gathered 69,266,350 or 60.62 per cent of the vote. 
The second candidate, President Megawati Sukarnoputri gained 44,990,704 votes 
or 39.38 per cent. There were 2,405,651 informal votes or 2.05 per cent. 
Despite the fact that these were the first ever direct presidential elections, 
at least 33 million Indonesians abstained.

As Inside Indonesia readers will know, the September presidential elections 
finished a process that began in April with parliamentary elections and was 
punctuated in July with a first round presidential vote.

With the elections now over, the overwhelming majority of commentary is 
emphasising the smooth and trouble free nature of the election process. In this 
view, the political framework that emerged after the fall of Suharto has become 
stable. Associated with this kind of analysis is also an assumption, or 
assertion, that renewed stability under a SBY presidency will start to attract 
foreign investment back to Indonesia and therefore begin to solve the country's 
economic problems. This approach posits the election as a climax to a political 
reformation of the institutions of representation and government thrown into 
chaos after Suharto was brought down.

Social struggle

There is another way to view the elections, however: as a moment in a longer 
running struggle over the political economy of Indonesian society. This 
struggle is at present intensifying. The elections were, in many ways, simply a 
distraction. There is little doubt that the political form of Suharto's New 
Order regime - a dictatorship - was a major focus for intensified political 
opposition to Suharto during the 1990s. In particular, various sections of the 
Indonesian elite were increasingly eager for a system that shared power more 
'equitably' among them, rather than concentrating such power, and the wealth 
that went with it, in the hands of only Suharto and his cronies.

However, the unravelling of the Suharto regime in the form it took -giving 
birth to the ideas of 'reformasi' - would not have been possible if the 
disaffections of these elite groups had not also been paralleled by widespread 
discontent among the urban and rural poor. Suharto was forced into resignation 
as a result of increasing popular anger manifesting itself in protests, 
strikes, or rioting in a combination that threatened a total breakdown into 
ungovernmentability.

We should remember that the steady increase in social protest that began at the 
end of the 1980s was not initially centred on getting rid of Suharto. It also 
aimed to resolve socio-economic grievances. The large protests that surrounded 
the Kedung Ombo dam development in Central Java, the big strikes at industrial 
plants like Great Rivers and Gajah Tunggal, the land occupations of Cimacan and 
other areas, and the myriad of other protests were all responses to the growing 
range of socio-economic grievances flowing from the New Order's neo-liberal 
economic strategy.

The increasing number of riots was also connected to this spread of 
socio-economic discontent. Many members of the urban poor sought scapegoats for 
their bad living conditions. Some found those scapegoats among members of the 
ethnic Chinese community, others in 'outside' ethnic groups who had moved to 
their regions. Here too, the dictatorship as a political form was not the 
initial source of protest and resentment. Rather, the basic problem was 
impoverishment and inequality. 

Neo-liberal agendas

After the fall of Suharto, the Habibie, Wahid and Megawati governments have not 
only continued the New Order's general neo-liberal economic strategy. They have 
deepened these policies. This has been a consequence of the government's 
greater subservience to the conditionalities imposed by the International 
Monetary Fund and the World Bank. There has been a steady reduction in 
subsidies on prices of basic goods and a dismantling of protection for 
Indonesian based industry and agriculture. Factory closures and declines in 
important areas of agricultural production as well as pressures on farmers' 
incomes have been the result.

Throughout the 2004 election campaign, no party or candidate questioned these 
strategies. Incoming president SBY did not question this strategy while he was 
a minister in Megawati's government or while he was campaigning. The acceptance 
of the neo-liberal economic strategy by all candidates also helps explain the 
absence of enthusiasm among the mass of people for any of the parties' or 
candidates' campaigns. 

At least 30 per cent of eligible voters didn't even bother to vote, despite 
this being the moment of Indonesia's 'democratic triumph'. Equally important 
was the absence of any manifestation of popular enthusiasm for the candidates 
in terms of large scale direct participation in campaign activities. If 
anything, disillusion was more the feature. Seventy per cent of people voted 
but more out of (faint) hope than conviction.

While the election campaigning all operated within the framework of accepting 
the economic strategy status quo, protests over socio-economic grievances 
continued unabated. Strikes over privatisation, redundancy or pay continued 
around the country. Farmers kept protesting about land compensation or other 
issues. Students occupied university administration offices to protest against 
fee increases. Teachers, nurses and village administration employees protested 
to senior bureaucrats about insufficient funds for these areas.

Almost no sector of society has not featured such protests. Many such protests 
have been small, although earlier in the year some were very large, such as the 
teacher-student demonstrations in Kampar, Sumatra, which mobilised tens of 
thousands. The Kampar demonstrations, sparked by the rude response of a bupati 
(district head) when he was questioned over the allocation of funds for 
education, forced the bupati's removal.

Two distinct realities

In many ways, the disconnection between the protests and the election campaign 
made the latter seem somewhat surreal. Both realms of activity, the 'beauty 
contest' style election campaign and the protests and debates about the 
socio-economic situation were reported in the media, but it was as if they were 
parts of different realities.

Since the election, the two realms have started to move towards fusing again. 
Editorials and commentators in the media have been raising real concerns over 
impending further reductions in subsidies on fuel and the inevitable rise in 
prices. Few doubt th�s will be one of SBY's first actions, although many 
commentators are advising him to postpone such a move for three months, until 
he wins the people's confidence. His options for increasing confidence, 
however, are limited while he is wedded to the very policies giving rise to the 
grievances in the first place.

Some place hope in a return of investment because they assume that SBY will be 
able to bring an end to the growth in networks able to carry out terrorist 
attacks, restructure the courts so foreign companies get better decisions or 
otherwise achieve better conditions for investment. But one such condition that 
employers are pushing for is a reduction in the minimum wage: a policy hardly 
likely to end social discontent. 

In any case, long before any supposed investment flows might return (if they 
ever do) many more factories will close down. Next year, new World Trade 
Organisation regulations will come into force, allowing more cheap imports into 
the country. Manufacturers have been quoted in the media as saying that around 
half of industrial zones will close down.

The elections have not resolved any of the issues that produced increasing 
popular protest and anger throughout the 1990s. If anything, the strategy that 
has produced these grievances will get a breath of life from the new 
government. And while the end of Suharto's dictatorship has met the demands of 
most of the sections of the elite for a share of power, it has not ended the 
fighting amongst them over how that power has been shared. Even before SBY was 
sworn in, the parliament divided into 'government" and 'opposition', not on the 
grounds of differing economic or social strategies, but in alliances of 
opportunistic convenience. 

Max Lane ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is a Convenor of the Asia Pacific International 
Solidarity Conference and a Research Fellow at the Asia Research Centre, 
Murdoch University. 


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