What’s
next for Jokowi’s Indonesia?
After a shaky start, president Joko Widodo has steadied the ship.
And with no credible challengers in sight, he’s the prime candidate
for re-election in 2019.
When Joko Widodo (Jokowi)
became president in 2014, expectations about his impending presidency ranged
from enthusiastic optimism to concerns about his inexperience, to a dismissive
‘So what?’ attitude.
While the
optimists saw Jokowi’s unconventional rise to the top as a sign of hope for democratic reform in
Indonesia, the sceptics feared that his lack of support in parliament and his
status as a political outsider would make governance difficult for the new
president. Yet others argued that despite Jokowi’s populist appeal as a humble
and down-to-earth leader, he would actually be unable to make a difference to Jakarta’s
patronage-driven politics and that he would ultimately be just
another puppet of predatory oligarchic elites.
Two years
on, it seems as if none of the predictions were accurate. The optimists were
the first to realise that their expectations had been exaggerated as Jokowi
made a range of controversial cabinet appointments, failed to defend the
anti-corruption commission in a power struggle with the police, and started a populist war on drugs, which, to the dismay
of human rights advocates, included the execution of foreign drug smugglers.
At the
same time though, Jokowi did send some positive signals to democracy activists.
For
example by pressing parliament to retain direct local elections or by endorsing
the organisation of a public symposium about the anti-communist mass
killings of 1965 — something his predecessors had always refused to
do. His reaction to the annual haze crisis
triggered by the large-scale burning of forest in Sumatra and Kalimantan also
seemed more decisive than the half-hearted responses of previous
administrations. In short, Jokowi did not exactly turn Indonesian politics on
its head, but he also did not simply continue business as usual in every policy
field.
Where
business as usual did unfold, it had not been expected, namely in the
president’s relations with parliament. Upon taking office, Jokowi faced a
fragmented parliament in which his coalition of four parties only held a
minority of seats. Many pundits therefore expected an obstructionist
legislature that would seek to undermine Jokowi’s authority wherever possible.
Instead,
however, parliament has been strangely acquiescent and rarely challenged the
government’s agenda. To achieve this acquiescence, Jokowi used his presidential
powers in remarkably adroit fashion, offering positions in state institutions
in return for parliamentary support, placating party leaders with financial
perks, and using divide-and-rule strategies to exacerbate existing tensions in
factionalized parties. By early 2016, three members of the opposition coalition
had broken ranks with their leader Prabowo Subianto.
By
mid-2016, Jokowi has clearly settled into the presidency. Having tamed the
opposition and acquired new allies, he has committed more time and resources to
his main policy agenda, the development of Indonesia’s dilapidated
infrastructure. He has also paid more attention to international issues than in
his first year, trying to show greater assertiveness in dealing with
regional challenges. As a consequence, his approval ratings have increased in 2016,
after they had suffered in his first year in office.
Jakarta’s
established elite has taken note of these developments. Realising that Jokowi
is performing well enough to be the prime candidate for re-election in 2019,
former opposition parties like Golkar have already begun to position themselves as potential
partners for Jokowi in the next presidential election.
Up until
then, domestic politics in Indonesia looks set to continue on the familiar
pattern of broad political stability without much democratic
inspiration. Now that he feels reasonably secure in terms of
political support, Jokowi will try to focus his energies on boosting his
economic track record in order to shore up public support ahead of the next
election. Given that in his first year economic growth was underwhelming and
social inequality remained high, Jokowi will need to work on his economic
policies if he is to win a second term.
Significantly
though, regardless of Jokowi’s performance so far, there is currently no
credible challenger in sight who might have the resources to confront him in
2019. His former rival Prabowo has largely disappeared from public view and
seems unlikely to come out fighting once again unless Jokowi commits some
serious mistakes that would make him vulnerable for political attacks — for
example economic mismanagement or corruption.
With
national level politics under Jokowi now increasingly similar to those under
his predecessor, the more interesting political dynamics in the near future may
unfold elsewhere. In particular, the 2017 gubernatorial election in Jakarta
will be worth watching as incumbent governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama (Ahok) is seeking to defy the
odds and win re-election despite being a Christian ethnic Chinese
and taking on Jakarta’s party elite by pledging to run as an independent
candidate.
Ahok’s
popular appeal has triggered intense debate about the future of party politics
in Indonesia and with the polls currently showing a clear lead for the incumbent, the
election looks set to provide important insights into the future of electoral
campaigning, the balance between popular and oligarchic forces, and the
salience of ethnic and religious sentiments among the Indonesian electorate
Dr Dirk Tomsa is a lecturer in politics at La
Trobe University, and will be speaking at a panel in Melbourne on 7 July: Indonesia at
the Crossroads.
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