Indonesia’s Presidential Election 2019:
Jokowi’s Chances in West Sumatra And Why He Is Likely To Lose – Analysis
Joko Widodo is likely to lose the 2019 presidential
election in West Sumatra. Jokowi’s poor electoral prospects in the province are
based primarily on his association with the PDI-P which has links to founding
President Sukarno and his role in ending a rebellion in the province in the
1950s and 60s.
West Sumatra is the only province in Indonesia where more than 50% of
its population are consistently dissatisfied with the performance of the Joko
Widodo (“Jokowi”) government. This is based on data from various surveys since
2014. The data also predicted Jokowi to experience poor electoral prospects in
the 2019 presidential election in the province.
According to a survey by Indikator Politik Indonesia and Saiful Mujani
Research and Consulting (SMRC), more than 60% of West Sumatran people,
better-known as the Minangkabau ethnic community, are dissatisfied with
Jokowi’s performance. Both survey results were in line with the 2014
presidential election results, where the Jokowi-Kalla ticket only received
23.1% of the votes while their rival Prabowo-Hatta camp gained 76.9%.
Trend Not Favouring Jokowi
Since the fall of the Suharto regime in 1998, the Indonesia Democratic
Party of Struggle (PDI-P) has belaboured to gain political ground in the
province of West Sumatra. In the 1999 national legislative elections, although
the PDI-P gained a national majority of seats in parliament, they only won two
seats (out of 14) in West Sumatra province. In the 2004 and 2009 elections, the
PDI-P failed to gain even a single seat in the province, only finally gaining
back two seats in 2014.
Presidential candidates supported by the PDI-P have also fared poorly in
the province. In the 2004 presidential election, Megawati Sukarnoputri only
received 16% of the votes in West Sumatra, while her rival Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono (running as a candidate from the Democrat Party) received 84% of the
votes. This trend was repeated in the 2009 presidential election, when
Megawati, backed again by the PDI-P, pulled in only 5.9% of the votes compared
to SBY’s 79.9% in the province.
The 2014 presidential election showed this trend was not just about
individual candidates, but more broadly linked to party affiliation, when the
PDI-P backed the Joko Widodo-Jusuf Kalla ticket. Even though Jusuf Kalla’s wife
was an indigenous member of the Minangkabau ethnic community, the ticket only
garnered 23% of the votes compared to their rival Prabowo Subianto’s 76.9%.
Sukarno’s Painful Legacy in West Sumatra
Jokowi, nevertheless, has been more successful than Megawati in
consolidating some support from Minangkabau elites. On 17 March 2018, a number
of prominent Minangkabau leaders residing in Bandung expressed their support
for the president. On 17 September, ten local government heads (two Mayors and
eight Regents) in West Sumatra also declared their support for Jokowi in the
2019 presidential elections.
These supporters consider the development of infrastructure in Indonesia
under the Jokowi administration to have improved significantly. They have also
generally approved of his increased visibility in the region, having visited
West Sumatra five times in the first four years of his term to foster
development projects. This resulted in the creation of the hashtag
#MinangPemilihJokowi (“Minang Vote Jokowi”) in support of his candidacy.
However, while some local political leaders and Minang elites based in
Java Island support the president, Jokowi must still contend with the
controversial historical legacy of his political allies. The prevailing opinion
of Jokowi among many Minangkabau people is that he is an ‘employee’ of the PDI-P
and thus a tool of the party’s leader Megawati.
The crackdown by the Sukarno government on the PRRI movement in Sumatra
in the 1950s caused a deep and longstanding wound among the Minangkabaus’ older
generation. Therefore, any individual candidates and political parties
associated with President Sukarno will not win major support from Minangkabau
people.
Psychological Scars of PRRI Remain
After Indonesia declared independence in 1945, it went through a period
of instability as it struggled with economic development, foreign debt and
governance failures. This challenge was exacerbated by the fact that the
newly-formed nation was composed of many diverse and fractious provinces and
not all of them were satisfied with the Java-centric direction the country was
taking under Sukarno.
As a result, from 1958-1961 several provinces in Sumatra declared their
independence and attempted to separate from the new nation-state of Indonesia.
Known as the Revolutionary Government of the Republic of Indonesia (PRRI), the movement
was considered a rebellion against the central government and military forces
were dispatched to Sumatra to suppress it.
The crackdown on the PRRI movement caused a deep and longstanding wound
among the Minangkabaus’ older generation. PRRI leaders were persuaded by the
Sukarno government to negotiate but all of them were arrested and sent to
prison. During the conflict, thousands of Minangkabau people were victims of
the ferocity of the government army and many were displaced from Sumatra.
Jokowi’s Current Policies on Islamist Groups Not
Helping
Based on the Indonesia Programme’s research in the province of West
Sumatra at the end of November and the beginning of December 2018, this
historically painful narrative still occupies a prominent place in the memories
of some public figures and continues to generate resentment and distrust of
anything associated with the ideology and legacy of Sukarno.
Furthermore, in general Minangkabau culture is quite conservative,
adhering to a traditional philosophy of adat bersandi syarak, syarak
bersandi Kitabullah (“traditions are built on religion and religion is
built on Al-Quran”).
Jokowi is generally viewed skeptically by hardline Islamic organisations
and his dissolution of conservative groups like Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI)
and purported ‘discrimination’ toward militant clerics like Habbib Rizieq are
considered harmful to Islam by some conservative Minangkabau people. This,
coupled with his association with the PDI-P, Megawati and the toxic legacy of
her father hurts Jokowi’s electability in West Sumatra even as his
developmental agenda gains popularity.
*Adri Wanto is an Associate Research
Fellow with the Indonesia Programme at S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore.
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