komentar dari kolumnis the jakarta post tentang sby vs ical walaupun 2014 masih 
3 tahun lagi.  mungkin bagi mereka ini sekedar pemanasan dan saling menjajagi 
kekuatan dan kelemahan lawan menjelang pertarungan yang sebenarnya di 2014.

ical sudah pasti akan mencalonkan diri tahun 2014, sedangkan sby tidak bisa 
mencalonkan lagi karena konstitusi.  masih belum jelas, siapa yang akan 
dicalonkan oleh sby, ani yudhoyono, edhie wibowo (pangkostrad), atau anas 
urbaningrum?

isi dari komentar tulisan ini adalah sby 'strategic thinker' ulung.  walaupun 
sudah 2 kali ditusuk dari belakang oleh koalisi nya, sby tetap tegar.  sby bisa 
memasang 'muka tipu' dan memanipulasi orang sehingga lawan politiknya terkecoh, 
tidak seperti megawati yang bisa 'terbaca' emosinya oleh lawan politiknya.

contoh yang paling jelas adalah jk, semua hasil kerjaan jk yang fenomenal 
kreditnya ke sby.



=============



Latest score in the coalition political match: SBY 1 - Ical 1
Endy M. Bayuni, 
Washington, DC

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY) won the latest running open battle 
with Aburizal Bakrie (Ical), the business tycoon and chairman of the Golkar 
Party, which is a member of Yudhoyono's coalition government — but barely. The 
score between the two men, as it stands today, is one apiece. The war is far 
from over, so expect a few more battles like this in the lead up to the 2014 
presidential election.

On Tuesday last week, Yudhoyono outmaneuvered Aburizal to defeat a motion 
initiated by Golkar and another member of the coalition government, the 
Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), in the House of Representatives. The motion, 
which called for an inquiry into allegations of collusive practices between tax 
officers and well-connected people, was defeated, with 264 "yes" votes and 266 
"no" votes.

In the vote, Golkar and PKS were joined by the Indonesian Democratic Party of 
Struggle (PDI-P) and the People's Conscience Party (Hanura), officially the 
opposition parties in the House. Yudhoyono's Democratic Party counted on the 
support of three other coalition partners — the National Mandate Party (PAN), 
the National Awakening Party (PKB) and the United Development Party (PPP) — and 
one party from the opposition camp, the Great Indonesia Movement Party 
(Gerindra).

To the casual observer, what was so galling about this affair is that this is a 
battle that pit members of the coalition government against each other, with 
the opposition parties playing a mere supporting role. On a more personal 
level, this is really a battle between Yudhoyono and Aburizal. We will soon 
know about the fate of the coalition government following the latest 
backstabbing by Golkar.

The President is now coming under a lot of pressure from within his own party 
to expel the coalition partners that had broken ranks. He came under a similar 
pressure last year when he lost the first battle with Aburizal, but rather than 
expelling or punishing for the betrayal, Aburizal was awarded the chair of the 
newly established joint secretariat of the coalition partners.

In January 2010, Golkar and PKS, in collaboration with PDI-P and other smaller 
opposition parties, forced a House inquiry into the 2008 bailout process of 
Bank Century, a small-sized bank whose depositors included major donors in the 
2009 election campaign. The inquiry led to a House resolution that faulted the 
government for approving the expensive bailout.

Yudhoyono's Democrats lost the vote in the House, and the result forced former 
finance minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati, deemed most responsible for the bailout 
decision, to resign.
The ensuing legal investigation, however, found nothing incriminating in the 
bailout process. Still, the defeat affected not only the credibility of the 
President, but he also lost the most reform-minded minister in the Cabinet. Sri 
Mulyani has since joined the World Bank as managing director.

So what was Yudhoyono thinking? Why did he decide not to punish Aburizal at 
that time, and instead even rewarded him with a new footing in the government? 
Why does he need to retain Golkar at all?

Coalition government is a fact of life in Indonesia's multiparty system, even 
when the constitution grants the elected President immense power to form his 
own government. And no one knows how to play the coalition game better than 
Yudhoyono, being the first directly elected president in Indonesia in 2004. He 
may not have fully mastered the art of managing a coalition government, but he 
knows how the system works, perhaps better than anyone else in the country.

Although Yudhoyono won with 62 percent of the vote in the 2009 presidential 
election, his party only controls 26 percent of the seats in the House. He 
needed to forge a coalition in order to ensure majority support for his 
legislative agenda. After his re-election in 2009, he brought Golkar back into 
the government even though the party had been the major challenger at the 
polls. The current government, comprising six parties, technically controls 76 
percent of the House.

No one should underestimate Yudhoyono when it comes to managing the coalition. 
Ask Jusuf Kalla, his vice president in 2004-2009 and Golkar chairman at that 
time. It was a partnership that worked well, but it was one which, in the end, 
benefited Yudhoyono politically — at the expense of Kalla. When the two slugged 
it out at the polls in 2009, Golkar was demoted to a distant second to make way 
for Democrats, and Kalla bitterly came a poor third to Yudhoyono in the 
presidential election.

Now Yudhoyono's chief nemesis is the new Golkar chairman Aburizal Bakrie, and 
again, in spite of the backstabbing in 2010, the President decided to retain 
him and Golkar within the coalition. Several overtures to PDI-P, the only other 
party in the House with significant number of seats to replace Golkar in the 
coalition, had been repeatedly rebuffed by its chair Megawati Soekarnoputri. It 
would not be surprising if Aburizal and Golkar, and PKS for that matter, remain 
in the coalition after the latest betrayal.

The bigger stake in the running battle between Yudhoyono and Aburizal is the 
2014 race. While it is almost certain that Aburizal will take a crack at the 
election, it is still unclear who Yudhoyono plans to field for the Democratic 
Party. He cannot run again because the constitution limits him to a maximum of 
two consecutive terms, but as patron of the largest party in the country, he 
will still yield influence on the outcome of the 2014 race.

Whatever Yudhoyono does with the coalition government obviously will have 
something to do with whatever plans he has in store for 2014 and beyond. And 
the one plan that he has kept very closely to his chest is the nomination for 
the 2014 presidential candidate.
Never underestimate the man who built his career as a military strategic 
thinker. He is probably still the best in the country when it comes to playing 
the game of coalition politics. He certainly showed that in 2009.



The writer, a visiting fellow at the East West Center in Washington, is senior 
editor of The Jakarta Post.



=======




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