Jokowi, Indonesia’s ‘Middle Class President’,
is the classic example of his illiberal-democratic class. And he’s clearly
comfortable with his uncomfortable accommodations
Joko Widodo’s second
cabinet reshuffle on 28 July has sparked a fresh round of furious debate about
what it all means.
Jokowi’s main political
backers, PDI-P, made no gains, but the reshuffle bestowed some key posts to new
coalition parties, PAN and Golkar, rounding out the seven party rainbow cabinet
that Jokowi eschewed early in his campaign.
Mysteries abound.
How, for
instance, did Jokowi coax Sri Mulyani back for a starring role in Jokowi’s
economic dream team, despite key architects of her 2010 fall sitting in his
same camp? General Wiranto, serial and serious human rights abuser, Hanura head
and supporter of the Jokowi coalition, is back in government, in an appointment
that feels decidedly absent of political necessity.
Luhut
Panjaitan, the president’s former-business partner, ex-military general,
political fixer, and feted “real deputy president” was abruptly transferred
from the Political, Legal and Security Affairs portfolio to Coordinating
Minister of Maritime Affairs.
More
puzzling still was his sad Facebook status which suggested that
for an all-powerful political tsar, he had little prior knowledge that the
switch was coming. Meanwhile, Anies Baswedan, the cabinet’s last remaining
progressive pick, has been ousted, with Jokowi reportedly terminating their
relationship.
Does the
reshuffle show that Jokowi, Indonesia’s first middle class president since the
fall of Suharto, is consolidating power or that he is merely a
puppet for established political elites?
The
question itself speaks to an ongoing debate in the study of Indonesian politics
about the extent to which ordinary politicians can enact reform in a predatory
political landscape dominated by oligarchs and old-regime politico-bureaucrats.
On one
side of that debate have been the oligarchy theorists who argue that Indonesian
politics is so riddled with rent seekers that ordinary people-cum-politicians
like Jokowi are too constrained to be able to effect meaningful change.
On the
other side of the fence are pluralists who agree that the political landscape
is populated by a ruling oligarchy, but maintain that well made democratic
institutions can constrain their power. Change is possible and Jokowi’s rise
from entrepreneurial furniture maker to mayor to president, is evidence that
those institutions are starting to produce a new political class that can have
positive democratic effects.
Make no
mistake, the tensions and contestation between Jokowi and his coalition are a
big part of the fault-lines in his government. Understanding Jokowi as
fundamentally compromised by his old regime players is central to understanding
the limits of his administration.
But at
the same time, this line of argument sheds no light on the question of what can
be compromised in the tussle between reform and stasis. In a crowded bar
of political priorities, what are the limits of belief?
Jokowi’s,
it would seem, is a double shot of developmentalism straight up.
In the
rumble between the pluralists and the oligarchy theorists, what’s missing is an
appreciation of Jokowi’s own illiberal tendencies, his impatience with legal
complexity and the haphazard ideological mash-up that guides his economic
thinking. These are not qualities of the man per se, but symptomatic of the
Indonesian middle class and its unique political conditions under which it was
formed.
A
post-authoritarian developmentalism is front and centre of the administration’s
agenda. While reform has been one of the key slogans of the Jokowi administration,
that reform has focused mainly on the economy and not at all on amplifying the
quality of Indonesian democracy.
For
instance, despite the economic boon that legal certainty offers everyone from
foreign investors to national fiscal repatriators, the question of substantive
law reform has never been further from the political agenda. Indeed, the
President actively and repeatedly discourages the law from pursuing corruption cases for fear it will
interrupt everything from his “big bang economic liberalisation” to the tax
amnesty.
State
owned enterprises (SOEs), long used as piggy banks for the political elite,
have received an unprecedented capital injection to spearhead the administration’s infrastructure agenda.
There’s real rationality in that, but asking creaking SOEs to deliver
multibillion dollar projects, on 1 year tendered contracts without the parallel
imperative to reform processes and management, suggests a disinterest in the
fundamentals of accountability.
Jokowi
has introduced the death penalty with gusto, backed by overwhelming public
support. Eighteen drug felons have been killed by firing squad in just under
two years, while harm reduction programs have been systematically cut. Each
round of executions has seen serious questions about the legal integrity of the
trial and sentencing and the process of clemency has been riddled with
procedural irregularities. And yet, in the face of such bungling, NasDem’s
Prasetyo, a conservative political appointment to Attorney General, has
outlasted two cabinet reshuffles.
This
year, the promise to address unresolved human rights abuses has seen the
administration sponsor an unprecedented two-day symposium on the mass killings
of 1965. But, Jokowi himself was careful not to attend and to frame the
resolution of old human rights cases within a wider technocratic objective to “move forward”. Wiranto’s appointment to
Coordinating Minister of Political, Legal and Security Affairs effectively ends
this human rights conversation.
Meanwhile,
there has been major regression in the security sector.
Emboldened by deeply conservative leadership and presidential politicking, the
military has openly reclaimed its place in domestic security and development.
Defence Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu has argued that Indonesia is under threat
from a proxy war, waged through domestic NGOs,
forest haze and homosexuals. His counterpart heading the TNI, Gatot Nurmantyo
has openly voiced doubts about the suitability of democracy
to Indonesia. Together they front a people’s defence program, Bela Negara [State Defence], that harks
back to Hankamrata, or ‘Total People’s Defence’, a civil militarisation
program under the New Order.
Jokowi’s
pro-poor agenda is also mixed. There’s a health care card, an education card, a
new family prosperity card, all of which promise great things for social
redistribution, but social spending is yet to increase significantly. Jokowi
himself is careful to appear sympathetic to the problems of the poor that catch
his eye such as the Kendeng cement protestors. Others, such as
the fisher communities along the Jakarta Bay
that as governor he swore to protect, have seen their political hopes razed
alongside their homes. How the One Map project will balance the
imperatives of the state infrastructure program against community claims to
land will be instructive.
What we
are left with is a ruling ideology that is avowedly developmentalist, made up
of an ideological mash up of neoliberalism, economic nationalism, and social
engineering, rather than any liberal progressive agenda to improve the quality
of democracy.
Jokowi’s
developmentalist democracy goes beyond a simplistic personal attribute or set
of beliefs: it is inherent to his class status. After all, Jokowi is a member
of the bourgeoisie, the small entrepreneurial faction of Indonesia’s middle
class. This new rich came of age in the 1990s, in a wider context of waning
state capitalism and the emergence of a rising oligarchical class.
Up and
coming entrepreneurs of Jokowi’s ilk often didn’t have the luxury of avoiding
the predatory state. Instead they needed to become adept at forming alliances
with established political and business players, however uncomfortable. Those
alliances were as much an exercise in wilful misunderstanding beneath broadly
agreeable slogans – national integrity, Pancasila, food sustainability – than
any single ideological agenda.
More
broadly, elements of the middle class are defined by a kind of ideological schizophrenia,
often holding a confusion of liberal and illiberal views concurrently. They
exhibit more interest in firm rule, and the provision of services and
standards, than a truly social democracy.
The
middle class are fearful of social and spatial disorder, ever conscious of vast
number of Indonesia’s poor and the cheap labour they provide. Historically,
this has made the middle class vulnerable to populism and ultra-nationalism.
Their
extensive rational education makes them more, not less, vulnerable to the
magical thinking offered by technocratic solutions to socio-economic ills. When
that hasn’t worked, the middle class trust their coercive state institutions,
despite knowing their brutal history, to quell social disorder. Rather than
thinking of the bourgeoisie as beating heart democrats, repressed by old order
forces, and welcoming their rise as an a priori win for democracy, we instead
need to consider the long history in which alliances with regressive forces,
however shifting and disloyal, have central to their genesis.
This
should also give way to harder questions about the negotiated agendas of the
“new faces” cutting their teeth on regional politics with an eye upwards.
If the
cabinet reshuffle tells us anything, it’s that our Middle Class President is
more comfortable in his uncomfortable political accommodations than we have
previously imagined.
Jacqui Baker is a Lecturer in Southeast Asian
Politics at Murdoch University. This editorial is adapted from a talk given on
29 July at the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre’s Democratic Updates Policy
Roundtable.
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