Voter’s
right to reject Thursday’s Cabinet reshuffle was probably the source of the
upbeat tone of the first State of the Nation address from President Joko
“Jokowi” Widodo, presented in conjunction with Independence Day.
For a presidential address ahead of the 70th
commemoration of independence of Aug. 17, Friday’s speech was far from
inspiring rhetoric.
But
he said that the major reshuffle, including that of three coordinating
ministers and the trade minister, was “one of the best bridges to fulfill my
promise to the people”, to improve their welfare by improving the government’s
performance.
Jokowi was perhaps hoping that
Indonesians will relate his best intentions with those of the founding father
Sukarno, who repeatedly declared independence was a mere “golden bridge” to
achieve justice and prosperity for colonized people. Yet instead of the
economy, the President said today’s main problem was the “thinning of decency
and ethics”, and pointed out the parties he was alluding to. “The thinning of
our customary mutual respect, the drying up of our culture of tolerance, both
among the public and among official institutions like law enforcers, civic
organizations, media and political parties, cause this nation to be trapped in
each person’s respective egotistical circle.
” Like other political leaders, Jokowi
blamed all but himself for the shortcomings of his 10-month administration. But
the early phase of his leadership has indeed been acutely painful for citizens
watching the dramatic episodes among law enforcers under a seemingly timid
president, mainly the legal assault that the National Police, apparently backed
by powerful politicians, carried out against the Corruption Eradication
Commission (KPK) and its supporters.
The blatant and more hidden political
tussles have temporarily been settled, it seems, by the Cabinet reshuffle, and
earlier measures including the cooperation agreement between the Police,
Attorney General and the KPK, as the President reiterated on Friday. It has
been hard to differentiate the presidential political foes from his allies;
thus one could understand his repeated call for patience, optimism and unity,
against being “fragmented by political conflicts and short term interests”, as
he evoked the spirit of unity in the early years of independence.
Jokowi went so far as venting his
frustration over rowdy citizens often engaging in “public hysteria” over
“sensational” issues, egged on, he added, by the media chasing rating. But as
he acknowledged Indonesia’s signs of a better democracy, the President and Vice
President Jusuf Kalla, who has hinted at favoring a return to lèse-majesté
criminal clauses, must strive to live with the risk of relatively new freedoms
— mainly today’s tendency of everyone “feeling free, absolutely free in their
actions and in voicing their interest”.
The seemingly green leader in Jakarta’s
vicious center of power has yet to win abundant confidence, as reflected in the
rupiah, which is dangling at 14,000 against the US dollar. But citizens will
give him enough space to step forward, though they have little other choice.
President Jokowi should continue to keep his cool and differentiate merely loud
citizens from those with actual power.
Jakarta Post Editorial
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