http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/KG14Ae01.html

Jul 14, 2009


Democratic disconnects in Indonesia
By Jacqueline Hicks 


JAKARTA - As Indonesia's politicians and powerbrokers tentatively begin to 
cobble together a new ruling coalition, there is a great deal of optimism both 
here and abroad about the country's democratic future, much of it surrounding 
the personality of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, the incumbent president and 
provisional winner of last week's polls. 

The country's first directly elected president in 2004, Yudhoyono this year 
became the only head of state in the post-Suharto reformasi era to serve a full 
term of office. Now, he is the first president in the same era to be 
democratically re-elected. So what do the historic polls say about the broader 
state of Indonesian democracy? 

Procedurally, Indonesia has shown that its institutions are capable of staging 
a largely free and fair election. The National Election Commission's (KPU) 
failure to register tens of millions of potential voters was certainly a 
problem, but its roots are deeper than just the KPU's competence. 

Runner-up and former president Megawati Sukarnoputri has indicated she plans to 
legally challenge the validity of the results, despite earning less than half 
of the 60% Yudhoyono appears to have won. Incumbent Vice President Jusuf Kalla, 
who appears to have placed a distant third at around 10%, could also mount a 
challenge to the results. 

Few have acknowledged that the same problem occurred in 2004. In November of 
that year, the previous KPU was found guilty in court of not registering some 
30 million potential voters. Then the political parties showed little interest 
in the issue, unlike this year when it was ruthlessly exploited for political 
gain. 

The voter list problem cannot be separated from the wider difficulties the 
Indonesian government has in registering its citizens, whether for tax 
purposes, births and deaths or voting in elections, across the massive 
archipelago. What counts is that, in the end, the results of both this year's 
legislative and presidential elections were considered legitimate by most of 
its participants as well as by the vast majority of the population - a notable 
achievement in such an administratively complex country as Indonesia. 

Looking back over the substance of the campaign, there was certainly no 
shortage of the usual vague rhetoric and personality driven politicking. But 
there was also evidence of substantially more policy detail compared with the 
2004 campaigns. For instance, Megawati said she would set up health insurance 
for students, abolish outsourcing contracts for workers and throw out an 
education bill that allows for private investment into schools. 

Yudhoyono also made some fairly specific promises, such as vows to extend 
micro-credit facilities, to keep the present labor-friendly manpower law 
intact, and to maintain oil subsidies and direct monthly government payments to 
the poor. To be sure, sometimes there were crossed wires: while Yudhoyono's 
campaign team claimed their candidate would not sell state assets, his running 
mate and former central bank governor Boediono was giving speeches detailing 
why privatization was a good policy idea. 

Nevertheless, the usual characterization of these being personality-driven 
political platforms completely without substance was a misleading analysis in 
this year's legislative and presidential campaigns. Concrete differences 
between candidates and parties did exist, one indication of a maturing 
democratic process. 

Mass electoral movement
However, the elections also highlighted a more fundamental weakness in 
Indonesian democracy, one that may prove hard to shake. Sustaining a trend that 
started in 2004, this year showed just how divorced political party elites have 
become from their grassroots constituencies. Unlike in the past, elections are 
no longer won or lost on the support of local party chapters or mass 
organizations linked to political parties. 

Sometimes called by their Dutch name onderbouws, these mass organizations are 
traditionally religious, explicitly political or ostensibly for other purposes 
such as youth organizations or farmers' associations. Ex-president Suharto's 
party, Golkar, was founded on affiliation to many such grassroots groups while 
outlawing similar ties to other parties. 

It was these organizations, along with local branches of political parties, 
that brought out the vote in 1999 and to a lesser but significant extent in 
2004. This year their role was much reduced. Suhardi Suryadi, head of research 
organization LP3ES, and Muhammad Qodari, director of pollsters Indo Barometer, 
are two analysts who have detected just such a sea change in voting behavior. 

"There are no longer any parties based on grassroots activities," they told a 
seminar in June. "Onderbouws that are not supported in between elections will 
not make much effort at election time." 

Surveys have shown that Islamic parties cannot count on the support of mass 
Islamic organizations to win them votes. Even when the leaders of Islamic 
organizations set up political parties or publicly supported candidates, only a 
tiny minority of their organizations' members actually voted the way they were 
encouraged. 

The relations between political party leaders and their local branch members 
are also weakening. Heads of some parties heard criticism and dissent from 
their own grassroots members for supporting particular presidential candidates. 

The Partai Amanat Nasional (PAN), Partai Bintang Reformasi (PBR) and Partai 
Persatuan Pembangunan (PPP) had particular internal problems, but there was 
also a marked lack of enthusiasm from within former powerhouse Golkar for their 
own candidate and chairman, Kalla, who was essentially chosen by the party 
elite. 

With such disjuncture between the top and bottom of political organizations, it 
is the media which now connects the grassroots to the political elites. The 
political advertising spent for each election is well-documented by Nielson 
Media Research, which counts the party advertising in newspapers and on 
television all over Indonesia before calculating the cost from the media 
outlets' published rates. 

Nielson's survey estimated that political parties spent 97 billion rupiahs 
(US$9.6 million) for the 1999 elections and 494 billion rupiahs in 2004. The 
total amount for the 2009 elections has not yet been made public, but with the 
figure for January to March already standing at 1.06 trillion rupiahs, it is 
likely to be many times what it was in 2004. 

In some ways, the triumph of the media over political organizations is simply a 
sign of the times, a more modern method of political communication. But its 
effects can also be detrimental for a democracy, especially one that is only 10 
years old. Without robust political organization at the grassroots level, 
people are only heard in the political process at election time - anathema to 
democracy in which the whole raison d'etre is to channel the aspirations of 
ordinary people to those in power. 

Grassroots political organizations are also essential to developing strong 
party ideologies and identities - two components that are sorely missing from 
Indonesian politics. All too often, political parties seem to represent the 
interests of the party elite rather than their members, making for volatile 
coalitions in parliament and difficulties in passing legislation. 

Until the links between the grassroots and those in power are strengthened, 
Yudhoyono may find the political stability he has been elected to provide 
elusive and the much-cheered consolidation of Indonesian democracy more shallow 
than deep. 

Dr Jacqueline Hicks has written on Indonesian politics for newspapers, journals 
and institutions over the past 10 years. She is currently in Jakarta 
researching mass political organizations and may be reached at 
hicks.ja...@google.com
 
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