Take that, general!
Debate gives the Jakarta
governor a further edge in presidential election
In the precinct of spin, the legion of public relations experts, analysts
and advisors around former Gen. Prabowo Subianto seemed to have a pretty clear
message the past few weeks: The one-time Suharto-era officer locked in an
uphill battle for president against Jakarta Governor Joko “Jokowi” Widodo has
his feet back under him, the momentum is shifting and the race is narrowing.
“It’s closed to five points,” said one Prabowo operative, citing an
unnamed poll before a campaign event last week. “It’s basically tied.”
Meanwhile, in the online corridors of Facebook and Twitter, doubts were
being sown about Prabowo’s opponent in anonymous postings. Jokowi is
inexperienced and incompetent, he is half-Chinese, he may not even be a Muslim.
The mutterings were having some effect; credible polls showed Joko’s lead
shrinking, from 17 points or so in April to as low as 11 points in recent
surveys.
Prabowo wants to appear tough and above all competent as he fights down
to the wire for a prize he has been seeking most of his life. He got a boost
when the powerful Golkar Party joined his coalition in May. “Look at him,” said
one of the general’s spin gurus. “Indonesia needs a real leader. That’s
Prabowo.”
Then came this week’s presidential debate, the first of five scheduled
to be held before the July 9 vote. It looked like the revenge of Jokowi.
When the two campaign teams took the stage on Monday evening for the
two-hour session, the expectation was that Prabowo, with running mate Hatta
Rajasa, would likely far outshine Joko and his running mate, former Vice
President Jusuf Kalla.
Kalla is savvy enough and a seasoned politician with a strong track
record, but Joko, the conventional wisdom went, is too humble and self-effacing
to outduel a veteran of center stage like Prabowo. If things went according to
script, the numbers would narrow precisely as the general’s advisors predicted
they would; the governor just had to stumble.
Joko did not play along. His answers were clear and practical; he seemed
to offer solutions on a range of topics, while Prabowo and Hatta seemed too
general. Then Kalla took direct aim at Prabowo’s biggest vulnerability: his
human rights record from the murky period in 1998 when the Indonesian economy
fell apart and anti-Chinese riots claimed hundreds of lives. It was the general
who stumbled.
Pressed on the kidnapping of political activists during the mounting
turmoil of 1998, the one-time son-in-law of President Suharto said, “I am a
former soldier who has done his duty as best as I can. Aside from that, it is
up to the judgment of my superiors.”
“I am the toughest human-rights defender in the republic,” he added, his
voice straining when Kalla kept hammering away at the issue.
For months, observers in Jakarta have wondered when Prabowo’s military
service and human rights record would become a campaign issue. This was the
week it came out forcefully in the open, and Prabowo will likely spend the rest
of the campaign having to address the issue.
His campaign may have only itself to blame. One-time political allies,
Prabowo and Joko would not ordinarily be disposed to hostility. But an advisor
to Joko told me this week that the candidate was enraged by the anonymous
attacks on his family and his religion. “He kept calm,” said the advisor. “He
did not lash out. But he was seething and he wanted revenge. That was the debate
strategy.”
Prabowo’s advisors contend he did nothing wrong in 1998, that he was
honorably discharged from the service and that charges that he abused the
rights of activists and others are baseless. The unpleasant fact remains,
however, that the events of late 1998, which most seasoned observers put down
to a battle for power between Prabowo, then head of the Army Strategic Reserve
Command (Kostrad) and Gen. Wiranto, then chief of the armed forces, have
never been fully explained. Wiranto prevailed, power passed to a civilian
administration and Prabowo was shortly discharged from the army. No one was
prosecuted for orchestrating the deadly riots, shooting demonstrators or
creating mayhem.
Wiranto, himself tarred by numerous abuse charges, is now backing
Jokowi, along with a number of retired generals who served with Prabowo.
As if on cue following the debate, a 1998 letter was leaked detailing
the charges Prabowo’s superiors brought against him after Suharto stepped down.
The document suggested Prabowo acted outside the chain of command in carrying
out kidnappings of activists in early 1998 and that he consistently ignored
orders from his commanding officers on various occasions.
The military tribunal hearing the case, which included Lt Gen. Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono, now president, stopped short of punishing Prabowo and he was
left with his rank and pension intact when he stepped down. The document, which
senior retired officers have said is genuine, however, is sufficiently damaging
to raise doubts about Prabowo’s behavior in command.
With as much as 30-40 percent of the electorate still undecided,
according to several polls, putting Prabowo on the defensive seems a wise
choice for the Joko camp. Following the debate, a pair of polls showed Jokowi
getting a 2-3 point jump in the polls, according to the Jakarta Post.
Look for the more of the same in the next few weeks as Joko seeks to
cement his lead. The more Prabowo is forced to look to the past, the more Joko
seems like the man of the future.
Reposted from the Edge Review
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