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               Off to the polls
  No. 58
  April        Indonesians will vote in June. Can they escape from the
  -            dead hand of past elections?
  June
  1999         Jim Schiller

               Indonesian newspapers say 1999 is the year that will
               decide Indonesia's future, but that the coming elections
               have the potential for national disaster. As I write, the
               remnant national assembly (DPR) has just completed
               negotiating rules for the June elections (see box). A
               legislature stacked with people from the Suharto regime,
               now called the Corruption, Collusion and Nepotism Order,
               had the task of reforming the system which put them in
               office. Initial comments on the reforms have been mixed.
               Will the laws be widely accepted? If they are, will the
               elections implemented under them be seen as fair enough to
               give the elected government a chance to govern?

               To consider those questions we need to consider what
               elections are supposed to do, and then what they have been
               expected to do in Indonesia.

               Democratic theory sees elections as opportunities for the
               people to have their say. It imagines equal, independent
               and enlightened citizens. Votes are conceived as
               calculated decisions about who should govern, based on
               candidates' policies and records. Government is made
               accountable to citizens who are empowered at the ballot
               box.

               Even in the most homogenous and prosperous democracies,
               these assumptions are not fully realised. Election
               campaigns are not necessarily informative. Many voters do
               not make calculated decisions about their votes. Voters
               may be equal in the voting station, but they are far from
               equal in their wealth or capacity to influence the
               results. Many citizens of liberal democracies do not feel
               empowered by election process.

               More recently, the authors of The politics of elections in
               Southeast Asia have focused on more mundane uses of
               elections. Elections, they say, may help Third World
               governments to appear democratic and therefore qualify for
               aid, investment and preferential trade from fellow
               'democracies'. Elections may also help to pacify the
               population. If people believe the election system is
               'fair' they may be willing to wait for their turn to win.
               If citizens believe that they have had a voice and that
               the winning parties have received a mandate from the
               people they may be more willing to obey authority and to
               refrain from street politics.



               Engineered

               The Suharto government never intended to empower people.
               It wanted elections that pacified the population and
               justified foreign aid. Its elections, called 'festivals of
               democracy' aimed to generate enthusiastic participation
               without risking power. The two political parties were
               meant to be supporting cast in the victory of the
               government party. To create the appearance of choice at a
               ritual without choice, the Suharto government put in place
               one of the most comprehensively engineered electoral
               processes in the world.

               It began by reducing the stakes. The presidency was not
               filled through popular elections. Instead, the president
               was 'elected' by a mainly appointed super-parliament
               (MPR). The MPR consisted of 500 representatives from the
               national assembly (DPR), of whom 75 were military
               appointed by the president, plus an additional 500
               presidential appointees. The voters' choice was limited to
               42.5% of the body that elects the president, and 85% of
               the seats in a rubber-stamp national assembly.

               Since 1977 only three parties have been permitted to
               contest elections. They are the state party, Golkar, which
               had unparalleled access to private donations, and to the
               resources of the state, and two government-manipulated,
               cash-strapped, badly divided political parties, PDI (the
               Indonesian Democratic Party) and PPP (the United
               Development Party).

               The government allowed only a brief campaign period.
               Parties found it difficult to organise outside the
               campaign period. Government officials, also Golkar cadre,
               were able to influence voters before the campaign, or
               during the 'quiet week' before the poll. The government
               restricted popular campaign symbols, screened prospective
               candidates, and banned critical campaigners. It intervened
               frequently to remove outspoken politicians. It also
               detained or threatened those who proposed an election
               boycott.

               The most important reason for the government's success at
               achieving a high turnout and Golkar victory was its
               control of an administrative structure which stretched
               from Jakarta down to the village. Local officials
               controlled development funds that could be used to reward
               the loyal. They also issue documents that are crucial in
               the everyday life of most Indonesians. Anyone who wants to
               send their children to school, sell land, or open a
               business must obtain the signatures of their local and
               village officials. This control over sanctions and rewards
               makes state officials powerful patrons everywhere in
               Indonesia, but especially in poor, isolated areas outside
               Java. Patronage was reinforced through intimidation by
               local officials, military and sometimes gangs.

               Local state and village officials were required to join
               the government party and were given quotas for Golkar
               membership and votes. Retired army officers and government
               officials managed the Golkar campaign. Officials and
               family members were candidates for local assemblies. These
               officials also headed the committees that policed the
               campaign, voting and vote-counting.

               The vote counting and tallying process provided little
               opportunity for independent scrutiny. The election ritual
               closed with a coerced declaration of acceptance of the
               results, signed by regional and national party leaders.



               1997

               State Secretary Moerdiono said that 'the [1997] election
               should take place quietly, full of anticipation and full
               of enthusiasm. ' The government's aim was to carry out
               elections that generated enough public participation and
               enthusiasm to give it some domestic legitimacy and
               international credibility without demonstrating the
               regime's need to resort to repression or fraud.

               It did not succeed. The election ended up looking more
               like a sham than a festival of democracy. In 1997 there
               was more resistance to the government's effort, more
               violence by and against government supporters, more
               negative images of the election, and more visible
               opposition to the election.

               More than one hundred were killed in one incident in
               Banjarmasin. A larger number were killed in daily campaign
               violence scattered across the archipelago. In Madura,
               crowds, disgusted with alleged vote fraud, burned down
               voting stations and government buildings. Elsewhere in
               East Java unrest continued for weeks after the election.

               The resistance and violence had several sources. One
               source was the anger and alienation that resulted from the
               removal of Megawati Sukarnoputri as leader of the PDI, and
               the government-supported, violent attack on her supporters
               at PDI headquarters in 1996. Thousands of her supporters
               saw the election as fraudulent and were ready to challenge
               Golkar and 'official' PDI campaign efforts. Thousands more
               joined with the Islamic party PPP and helped radicalise
               its campaign.

               Another source was the intensity of the government
               election effort. In 1992 the government vote had declined
               5%. In 1997 the government wanted to more than recoup its
               5% vote decline in 1992. Bureaucrats were mobilised to go
               all out for a victory. Weekly estimates of the Golkar vote
               using vote count declarations, rewards for delivering 95%
               or 100% Golkar victories, incentive programs to win the
               support of Muslim leaders, and huge mass rallies in PPP
               strongholds were all part of that effort.

               Money politics was extensive. It included incentive
               payments to officials, provision of cattle to villages
               voting 100% Golkar, and cash payments to voters. Alleged
               government intimidation of party supporters was widely
               reported. This included sending a dog's head to a Solo PPP
               leader, the beating of the PPP chairman in Wonosobo, and
               attacks on PPP supporters returning from a rally in
               Jepara. The government's overbearing effort, which
               included efforts to restrict mass rallies, provoked
               thousands of angered citizens to ignore restrictions and,
               sometimes, to engage in violence.

               Interestingly, negative news of the intimidation,
               violence, vote fraud, and vote buying was widely reported.
               The widespread availability of internet election stories
               may have made journalists more daring. The monitoring of
               the election and related human rights abuses by the
               national human rights commission (Komnasham) and the new
               independent election monitoring committee (Kipp) allowed
               the Indonesian press to report anger and frustration.



               Legacy

               The New Order set out to use an election to engineer
               consent. Instead it got violence and anger. So what is the
               legacy of 1997 and the Suharto election system? Four
               features stand out: a widespread suspicion of elections, a
               high level of campaign intimidation and violence, a
               suspect civil service in charge of the election, and the
               use of money politics.

               In 1997, vote declarations appeared weeks before election
               day, vote counts at the village level changed at the next
               level, and in North Sumatra Golkar transferred votes to
               the pro-government PDI. The fraud helped to generate a
               deep mistrust of authority. This increases the likelihood
               of future election violence, and the risk that losers will
               claim foul play. In the present economic and social
               climate, the risks of rejection and violence are high.

               The use of intimidation and violence by government
               supporters and opponents was a major feature of the 1997
               campaign. The cost of intimidation, in lives and in the
               poor image of the election was high. Many party supporters
               became more militant. Government mobilisation of crowds
               was matched by the PPP and by Megawati supporters.
               Instructions restricting public rallies were largely
               ignored and crowds were frequently provoked to violence.
               In 1999 it is hard to imagine that crowds of a million or
               more could remain non-violent.

               As the 1997 Jepara Golkar chairman, also the head of local
               government, stated in a post-election booklet: 'as we all
               know the election is designed for a Golkar victory'. To do
               this the civil service was firmly enlisted in support of
               the government party through payments, opportunities for
               promotion and job threats if they did not deliver a Golkar
               victory. Local officials are now used to being part of a
               political machine. They will go into 1999 dispirited, with
               less patronage, and with a more critical society than ever
               before. Still, if the government party can deliver some
               local patronage that could sway the election outcome,
               especially in isolated places like Southeast Sulawesi
               where Golkar obtained 98% of the vote in 1997. Depending
               on how the election laws and civil service regulations are
               interpreted, bureaucrats might ally themselves with Golkar
               or other political parties. Officials taking sides could
               have a devastating impact.

               Money politics was important in 1997, and is likely to be
               more important in the current depression. Money to buy the
               support of local patrons or to pay people for their vote
               has been a major feature of 'democratic' elections in
               Thailand and the Philippines. In 1999 it is unclear which
               Indonesian parties will have money to spend, or how much
               patron and vote buying there will be. It is certain that
               'money politics' will be an issue in determining the
               election's credibility.

               Against these legacies of Suharto, all of which make it
               more difficult to hold a successful election, is the
               inventiveness and courage of Indonesia's reformers and
               citizens. Reforms like the decision by Central Java
               university heads to turn the obligatory university student
               fieldwork into an extensive election monitoring program
               will make it harder for anyone trying to continue the
               practices of the Suharto period. The election laws and the
               'reform' mood within society mean that this election will
               be closely scrutinised. Trying to engineer the results
               would be disastrous.

               Jim Schiller lectures in the Department of Asian Studies
               and Languages at Flinders University in Adelaide. He has
               written on the 1997 elections for the University of
               Victoria, Canada, Centre for Asia Pacific Initiatives
               series.

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