Direct
elections represent true essence of ‘reformasi’
Donny Syofyan ;
A
lecturer in the Faculty of Cultural Sciences
at Andalas
University, Padang, West Sumatra
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JAKARTA
POST, 12 September 2014
The
House of Representatives’ attempt to pass a bill that will end the direct
election of local leaders constitutes another controversial legislative
maneuver in the post-presidential election period.
The
Red-and-White Coalition says local administration chiefs must not be elected
directly by the people, but by Regional Legislative Councils (DPRDs).
Direct
elections have been part and parcel of the nation’s reform agenda since 1998.
The dilemma of trying to uphold the people’s sovereignty while attempting to
curb the excesses of regional elections, however, should not be a strong
excuse for affecting the country’s political direction.
The
direct election is a “biological child” of reformasi that marked a break from
the oligarchy-oriented electoral regime of the New Order era to egalitarian,
transparent and accountable elections. Thus, the direct election is
inseparable from democratic consolidation in establishing substantive
democracy in Indonesia.
A
true democratic election means holding direct elections as a concrete way of
upholding public sovereignty. In contrast, a system of representation will
deprive people of their sovereignty and distort people’s will and logic.
Granted,
local elections have led to many problems, with burgeoning vote-buying being
the major consequence. Yet, vote-buying can be minimized as political parties
have very tight control of their candidates. It is regrettable that they are
reluctant to do it and enjoy the fraudulent practice instead.
Worse,
vote-buying also involves voters, suggesting that law enforcement for
perpetrators is almost absent. In fact, existing laws and rules are more than
enough to bring perpetrators to court, including the possibility of annulling
the candidates. If all parties related to the local elections are committed
to upholding the law, vote-buying will be easily minimized.
Despite
possible budgetary savings promised through the abrogation of direct
elections for regional chiefs, the move is fatally flawed in the sense it
seriously lacks foresight. Ineffective and inefficient direct local elections
(due to their high costs) could be tackled through holding the simultaneous,
direct elections of local leaders.
Referring
to the local elections in West Sumatra in 2010, it proved that the election
in 13 regencies/cities and the gubernatorial election made a 65 percent
saving in state finances.
Direct
elections pave the way for ordinary people to be public leaders in the
regions. The success story of Bima Arya Sugiarto becoming Bogor mayor is a
clear instance of this. On many occasions, Bima has stated that the emergence
of young people as winners in the elections in many regions shows the growing
role of the middle class in Indonesian politics.
The
middle class is outside the circles of money and politics. They move not only
in the virtual world but also in the real world. This trend is now eroding
political pragmatism and building a new and rational political culture.
In
addition, direct elections provide local talent in the regions with more
opportunities to be national leaders. Since 2005, direct elections have
succeeded in satisfying people’s political aspirations marked by the coming
of local leaders with above-average accomplishments such as Surabaya Mayor
Tri Rismaharini, Sawahlunto Mayor Amran Nur or Banjar Mayor Herman Sutrisno.
It is no exaggeration to say, therefore, that local democracy and political
regeneration will wither before they develop to the full.
Elections
by DPRDs will never strengthen the legitimacy of political leaders and
educate citizens to be politically savvy. People will lose their political
legitimacy as they are unable to ask for local leaders’ accountability, while
the councils will exercise more control over the ruling administration, which
in turn will create chaotic governance. It will muzzle the political rights
of citizens in determining and voting for their leaders.
Political
liberalization, which is a major prerequisite for substantive democracy, will
grow if direct elections continue. In 1996, sociologists Juan J. Linz and
Alfred Stepan stressed that political consolidation required five basic
requirements: a relatively independent political community, the growth of a
free civil society, a usable state bureaucracy for the new democratic
government, the rule of law that provides a legal guarantee for the freedom
of citizens and an institutionalized economic society.
Direct
elections will set the scene for these five requirements, considering their
pro-people over elite-based approach.
Efforts
to restore indirect elections are tantamount to bringing death to democracy
in Indonesia. Indirect elections will set the limit of the democratic process
only to the legislative without establishing mature democratic principles in
civil society. The Home Ministry once recorded that 3,169 legislators in
various provinces, cities and regencies had been entangled in corruption
cases in the last nine years.
The
formation of any legislation should be based on rational power. The
democratic progress that has been achieved should be increased by improving
electoral institutions from time to time, not turning democracy backward due
to short-term interests with a view to controlling local leaders. ●
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