http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/KB03Ae01.html

Feb 3, 2009 

Indonesia's silent voters being heard
By Megawati Wijaya 


JAKARTA - When President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono became Indonesia's first 
directly elected democratic leader in 2004, the former soldier was catapulted 
to power despite the fact his Democratic Party had won a mere 7.5% of the vote 
in previous legislative elections. 

Now with new legislative and presidential elections scheduled for this year, 
political analysts are focusing on the potentially pivotal role of the 
so-called golput, registered voters who choose for various reasons to either 
stay away from the polls or cast blank ballots, which accounted for around 25% 
of the electorate at the 2004 legislative polls. 

With relatively peaceful and orderly elections in both 1999 and 2004, 
Indonesia's decade-old transition from authoritarian to democratic rule has 
been widely lauded as a regional success story. Former strongman Suharto, who 
throughout his 32-year tenure was officially returned to power in six different 
elections, tightly controlled the country's electoral process, which he 
famously referred to as "festivals of democracy". 

At that time only three political parties were allowed to participate in the 
polls, which were consistently won by the military-linked Golkar party; in the 
first elections of the post-Suharto era, 145 parties registered and 48 parties 
finally took part in the 1999 polls. In 2004, the legislative polls were 
contested by 24 political parties in a sprawling democratic process that 
spanned 14,000 islands, three time zones, and entailed more than 500,000 
polling stations. 
Less critical attention, however, has been paid to the role of the golput, the 
huge number of registered voters who choose to not take part in the 2004 
legislative polls after nearly 95% of the electorate took part in the 1999 
elections. Accounting for over 25% of eligible voters, the golput was the real 
percentage winner of the 2004 elections, outpacing the top vote-getting Golkar 
party, which received just 21.6% of the popular vote. 

The term "golput", an antithetical spin on the word Golkar, harks to the 
Suharto-era when voters rebelled against the oppressive, military-backed New 
Order regime by casting empty ballots or purposefully spoiling their votes. 
Then the golput figure was smaller, estimated on average at around 10%, as 
Indonesians feared the consequences of their acts of defiance. 

In the democratic era, the golput is much larger and defined loosely as anyone 
who fails to vote during the election. The reasons for non-participation vary: 
some can't be bothered to vote; some are overwhelmed by the electoral choices; 
and, perhaps most crucially, many feel the democratic process has - like its 
authoritarian forerunner - failed to adequately address the crucial issues of 
inequality, injustice and corruption that successive elected leaders have 
promised to tackle. 

Analysts say it also demonstrates a rising political maturity among voters who 
are not willing to simply settle and choose among parties and candidates they 
feel are out of touch with average voters' needs and aspirations. While more 
democracy has brought positive changes, including a freer press and greater 
scrutiny of public affairs, elected leaders have failed to tackle the many 
systemic and economic problems that directly impact on voters' livelihoods. 

Silent protests
With new legislative elections scheduled for this April 9, the golput 
phenomenon is expected to make its popular absence felt again. Judging by the 
dismal turnout at recent regional elections, research company Indo Barometer, 
among others, predict that the golput figure could reach as high as 40%. 

For instance, the golput rate at the 2008 Cilacap in Central Java province and 
neighboring Banyumas regency elections stood respectively at 43% and 45%. 
Meanwhile, the golput rate at the Central Java gubernatorial election also held 
last year was estimated at nearly 70%. 

Those embarrassingly high rates of non-participation are raising hackles among 
politicians. Cilacap Regent Probo Yulastoro reportedly promised 23 district 
chiefs in his regency that each village administration would receive a free 
motorcycle if they could keep the golput rate at or lower than 5% in their 
villages during the election. 

The Indonesian Ulama Council (MUI), an umbrella organization of major Islamic 
groups, even issued a fatwa stating that it is "a moral sin" if one does not 
cast his vote in this year's elections. The MUI is known to support certain 
Islamic political parties which in past polls have performed poorly. 

In a public opinion survey of over 5,000 workers from both the government and 
private sectors spanning 33 Indonesian provinces, only 17.8% respondents said 
that they would choose not to vote. But the actual golput tally at upcoming 
elections could be much higher as 76.2% of the respondents in the same poll 
said that they "are not interested" in following the campaigns of both 
political parties and presidential candidates. 

Analysts and academics have different interpretations of the high non-vote 
rates. According to Max Lane, a writer, researcher, and political analysts with 
over 38 years experience in the country, Indonesians are not politically 
apathetic. "Everyone, everywhere, in Indonesia is talking and enjoys talking 
about politics," he said. 

"If Indonesians don't feel that any of the parties are championing their 
causes, they have the legal right not to choose," said Evi Arifin, a researcher 
at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore. By not choosing, she 
said, the golput has made a clear statement by not supporting any of the 
proposed parties and candidates. 

An increasingly free media has highlighted that national sentiment. The 
satirical political talk show, Demo Crazy, shown on national television 
recently referred to the people running for upcoming elections as itu-itu saja 
lagi or "the same old faces running again". Indeed the 2009 presidential poll 
seems likely to be a rerun of the previous one, with former president Megawati 
Sukarnoputri and incumbent Yudhoyono widely expected to square off again. 

This is despite the fact that neither candidate while in office was able to 
make a serious dent in endemic economic problems, including persistently high 
poverty and unemployment rates that are expected to only get worse as the 
global and financial economic crisis impacts on the country's crucial 
manufacturing and export sectors. 

Meanwhile, organized groups of laborers and farmers are still not adequately 
represented in government. That, analysts say, explains the high frequency of 
street demonstrations mounted against Yudhoyono's government. "[General 
elections] are only for powerful people or people who used to be in power to 
choose who is going to be in power next. This [election] is just a form of 
fraud," said Emelia Yanti, the secretary general of United Federation of 
Independent Labor . 

After 10 years of democracy, many Indonesians feel that government has failed 
to bring through new policies for real improvements to their livelihoods. While 
there are fundamental differences between the Suharto-era golput and its new 
democratic incarnation, the symptoms of voter frustration with Indonesia's 
political system are glaringly similar. 

In 2004, none of the major political parties garnered enough votes to reach the 
25% threshold legally required to nominate their own presidential candidate. 
That led to complicated coalition building, which effectively catapulted the 
military-linked Golkar back to the fore in a power-sharing arrangement with 
Yudhoyono's Democratic Party. 

That less-than-ringing electoral mandate has made it difficult for Yudhoyono to 
pass badly needed economic and other reforms through the legislature. Whether 
Indonesia can afford another weak administration in the wake of growing global 
turmoil is an increasingly important electoral question. But if recent 
elections and opinion polls are any indication, the golput will likely de facto 
win another Indonesian poll. 

Megawati Wijaya is a Singapore-based journalist. She may be contacted at 
megawati.wij...@gmail.com 


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