As the year draws to a close the president is
on firmer political ground but hopes for serious reform have almost entirely
evaporated.
If this trade-off between
reform and stability sounds familiar, it’s because it was the formula that came
to define the leadership of Jokowi’s predecessor, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. By
the time it ended, the Yudhoyono decade was simultaneously seen as the period
in which Indonesian democracy matured, and when its pathologies — corruption,
money politics and sectarian discrimination — became entrenched. The
commodities boom made it easier to obscure the serious structural deficiencies
of Indonesia’s economy. The politically thankless tasks of protecting human
rights and cracking down on corruption were put in the too hard basket.
This is where they remain.
As Jokowi was an outsider to Jakarta’s political elite, supporters hoped he
would strive to preserve his autonomy from the establishment. This might have
limited the influence of Indonesia’s corrupt political parties over the
executive branch. In reality, Jokowi seems to have internalised the idea that
his impostor status is a vulnerability. Jokowi has in fact maintained the
accommodative stance seen in his formation of a cabinet dominated by
party-linked patronage appointments.
What will be remembered as
the defining blunder of Jokowi’s presidency came in February when he nominated
a venal but politically-connected officer as the new police chief after intense
lobbying from party bosses. The ensuing public outrage saw the appointment
cancelled but Jokowi’s anticorruption credentials have never recovered.
Jokowi has signalled that he
sees good governance as subordinate to
quick policy implementation. As the powers of Indonesia’s formidable Corruption
Eradication Commission have come under renewed attack by politicians, Jokowi
has expended little political capital in its defence. He seems to have endorsed
instead the conservative trope that the Commission’s anti-graft crackdown has
‘slowed down development’. He has gone so far as to propose a decree protecting
regional officials from prosecution for ‘minor’ infractions such as flouting
procurement and budgeting rules.
Efforts by conservatives to
tame the perceived excesses of Indonesian democratisation continue. These
reactionary forces have been uninhibited by a president lacking Yudhoyono’s
concern for his international image as a statesman of democracy. The military
has taken small but worrying steps towards restoring its position in civilian
life. These include, launching a ‘defence of the nation’ indoctrination program
and pushing for regulations that allow it a greater role in domestic security.
Recent censorship of forums on the anniversary of the 1965 anti-communist
massacres and sporadic anti-foreign outbursts by officials speak to the
palpable return of a conservative nationalism under Jokowi.
Still, while advocates of
good governance and human rights see little to praise in the new president, the
gears of government still turn. Polls show that his popularity, which fell
throughout 2015, has bottomed out as welfare programs inherited from Yudhoyono
have been scaled up. Progress is being made on the centrepiece of his agenda:
dealing with Indonesia’s terrible infrastructure deficit. Opposition parties in
parliament have largely laid down their political arms — some even defecting to
the government coalition — in the knowledge that Jokowi represents business as
usual.
Jokowi’s renewed confidence
in his political standing may prompt more risk-taking on economic policy, which
has so far seen more misses than hits.
A new courageousness is perhaps behind his announcement during a visit to
Washington in October that Indonesia will seek to join the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) although it is difficult to judge what the result will
finally be. This pledge is nothing if not ambitious. Indonesia’s economy is
riddled with the protectionism and distorted domestic markets that the deal is
supposed to inhibit. Joining the TPP is as good a pretext as any for pursuing
badly overdue structural reforms.
But liberal proposals are
politically toxic in Indonesia — and at odds with Jokowi’s own track record.
His ministers spent much of this year recapitalising state-owned enterprises
with taxpayers’ money, raising tariffs, and promoting the misguided goal of ‘food self-sufficiency’.
The recent rhetorical lurch towards the agenda of foreign investors indicates
that Jokowi has at least taken their criticisms seriously.
But if Jokowi really wants
Indonesia to embrace free trade and markets, he has to be willing to live,
politically speaking, a little dangerously.
Liam Gammon is a PhD
candidate at the College of Asia and the Pacific, The Australian National
University.
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