Law
on legislative bodies vs presidential system
M Faishal Aminuddin ; A lecturer at the
school of Political Science,
Brawijaya
University in Malang, East Java
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JAKARTA
POST, 26 Agustus 2014
The
decision of the House of Representatives to amend the Legislative Institution
Law, otherwise known as the MD3 Law, has sparked intensive public debate.
During
a public hearing in May, the House’s special committee deliberating the bill
received a notice from the National Police chief regarding an article of the
law that authorizes the House to summons any citizen, if necessary by use of
force.
The
police said forced summons contradicted the Criminal Code and the 2002 Police
Law, which only authorizes the police to carry them out.
The law has also been criticized for
virtually giving lawmakers legal immunity as it requires law enforcement
agencies to obtain consent from the House’s Ethics Council to summons
lawmakers implicated in criminal cases for questioning, unless they are
caught red-handed committing crimes or are suspected of committing crimes
punishable by life imprisonment or the death penalty.
Questions
have been raised over the future public accountability of lawmakers. Indeed,
the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) also argued that such “immunity”
posed a considerable threat to the fight against corruption.
The
public is also curious as to how the procedural rules of the MD3 Law will
affect the relationship between the president and the legislatures.
Despite
having come out on top in the 2014 legislative election, the Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) appears to be the most disadvantaged due
to the new law as it imposes a voting mechanism for the selection of the
House speaker as well as leaders of the House’s 11 commissions and other
bodies.
The
PDI-P formed a coalition comprising the National Awakening Party (PKB), Hanura
Party and NasDem Party, which altogether hold only 207 House seats and would
be easily defeated by the coalition led by the Gerindra Party, which is
supported by the Golkar Party, National Mandate Party (PAN), United
Development Party (PPP), Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) and Democratic Party,
which controls 60 percent of the House’s 560 seats.
In
practice, the impact of such a new political configuration will be pervasive.
Most likely, the MD3 Law will weaken the Indonesian presidential system. President-elect
Joko “Jokowi” Widodo and vice president-elect Jusuf Kalla, who were nominated
by the PDI-P-led coalition, must be ready to deal with a stronger House.
There
are several steps, however, that could be taken to uphold the presidential
system, which is enshrined in the Constitution.
First,
to keep the House from becoming too powerful with low public accountability,
the president must employ several tools that reflect “parliamentarization of
presidentialism” or presidenciliasmo de coalizao as practiced in Brazil.
Among
such tools is establishing a single-party based Cabinet if the president’s
party holds outright majority in the legislature or, on the contrary, forming
a coalition government (Thibaut, 1998).
Second,
the elected president may co-opt politicians by distributing Cabinet seats to
major political forces in the House to secure majority support. Another way
is to appoint ministers from non-partisan figures or professionals in the
hope the president can rely on support from the public.
Unlike
losing presidential candidate Prabowo Subianto and his running mate Hatta
Rajasa, who had signaled that if elected they would form a grand coalition in
their Cabinet that represented all parties in the House, Jokowi-Kalla have
frequently emphasized a professional-based Cabinet. With the current
procedural rules in the MD3 Law, either Cabinet design is not free from
problems.
For Jokowi, his “slim” Cabinet design, which
may lack support from the House, looks fragile because presidentialism in
Indonesia does not recognize the inherent veto right for the president and
there is no mechanism such as a referendum to test the correlation between
the House’s claims and public interests.
The
absence of the president’s veto right and referendum as presidential
bargaining powers could be exercised by the legislative body to unseat the
president before the end of his term. Under the presidential system, the
president can be forced to step down due to incapacity and impeachment.
We
may learn from the interesting experiences of Latin America, where
presidentialism in a multiparty system is widely used. In Ecuador, the
government can run effectively only if the president secures outright
majority support in the parliament.
In
1997, the Congress dismissed president Abdala Bucaram for mental incapacity
following a parliamentary vote.
In
2005, president Lucio Gutierrez was impeached after 62 percent of the
Congress voted against him.
Above
all, the current configuration of the procedural rules in the MD3 Law has
increasingly increased the power of legislative bodies. In essence, it is
more difficult for the elected president to tame the legislature and break
the status quo.
If
the MD3 Law is not revised, it is likely that a coalition of parties that
hold the majority seats at the House will bring down the president and
destroy the current presidential system. ●
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