Congratulations, President Joko Widodo and Vice President Jusuf Kala of Republik Indonesia


October 20, 2014

Congratulations, Republik Indonesia

MY COMMENT: Congratulations to my Indonesian friends, associates and the people of Indonesia, Malaysia’s good friend, on the occasion of the inauguration of your President and Vice President today.

Joko and JusufPresident Joko Widodo and Vice President Jusuf Kalla of Republik Indonesia

Despite some controversies during the last Presidential election, Indonesia has shown that it is a viable democratic state and a worthy leader of the ASEAN community.

To new President and Vice President I extend my warm wishes and congratulations on their inauguration. Not to be forgotten, we must say a big thank you to President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono for ensuring that his country remains a democracy and for promoting excellent relations with my own country. The outgoing President worked well with our Prime Minister. The good relations we enjoy today with Indonesia under SBY will continue in strength with the Joko Widodo-Jusuf Kalla administration in Jakarta.

There will be occasional glitches and strains, no doubt, but none seriousZahrain_Mohamed_Hashim enough to strain bilateral relations severely. I am in touch with our Ambassador Dato’ Seri Zahrain Hashim who has been working hard to improve relations with the Indonesian media and civil society since he began his tour of duty. His efforts are already bearing fruit and may he continue in an activist fashion to promote mutual understanding via dialogue and constructive engagement with opinion makers, religious leaders, and civil society activists, and think tanks and academia.

We can look forward to a further strengthening of bilateral relations under President Joko Widodo. Together, and with Malaysia in the United Nations Security Council, Indonesia in partnership with Malaysia as the ASEAN Chair in 2015 can be a positive influence on the strategic direction of ASEAN. The new President’s choice of Foreign Minister is critical though, since Foreign Minister Dr. Marty Natalegawa did a yeoman’s job of putting Indonesia’s imprint on Southeast Asia’s politics and political economy.

There are many challenges ahead for the new President, of course but one can be optimistic (certainly I am) that the new President, ably assisted by the experienced and business friendly Vice President Kalla will bring promises of a better future for the Indonesian people. Our relations with the government and people of Indonesia cannot be taken for granted. It takes a lot of effort to nip those glitches and strains in the bud.–Din Merican

The new President of Indonesia faces many challenges

by Dr. Farish M. Noor@www.nst.com.my

farish-a-noorTHE inauguration of President-Elect Joko Widodo, popularly known as Jokowi, and his vice-presidential partner, Jusuf Kalla, today marks a turning point in Indonesia’s history, as a politician with a humble civilian background and with no connections to the established elite of the country assumes the most powerful office in that country. Much is at stake in this event, as are the expectations that have been laid before the Jokowi-Kalla establishment.

Having kept his cards close to his chest all along, Jokowi was reluctant to divulge the names of the members of the cabinet, said to comprise 18 technocrats and 16 seasoned politicians, though it is widely known that much political bargaining had gone into deciding the final line-up.

This new government will face a People’s Representatives Assembly (Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat, or DPR) that is dominated by the opposition, and it is widely expected that many of the reforms that the new government will try to push through will be stalled on the debating floor.

Sec Gen-PPPEven then, last-minute developments may turn the tide in favour of the Jokowi-Kalla pairing. Last week, the United Development Party (PPP) went through one of its internal convulsions when the party assembly decided to make Mohammad Romahurmuziy (left) its new chairman, replacing Suryadharma Ali.

The PPP, at present, happens to be one of the parties that is part of the dominant Prabowo Subianto-led Red and White coalition, which currently stands to dominate the DPR. But at the PPP assembly, the winning faction signaled that there was now the possibility that the party might abandon the opposition coalition and jump to the Jokowi-Kalla pact instead.

Even if this were to happen, it would still not be enough to tip the balance in the President’s favour, and it is likely that the stalemate will continue unless, and until, another bigger party jumps across the political divide as well.

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As things stand, we are likely to see a beleaguered presidency that will have to fight for every step it takes towards the ambitious reform package that it wishes to push through on a range of issues that span the public domain, from maritime policy, border issues, Indonesia’s role in the ASEAN region to tackling the problem of logistics and communication in that vast archipelago of a country.

Should the impasse remain, there is the likelihood that Indonesia’s wider ambitions will be thwarted by domestic political scrapes and scuffles, instead, as the parties and coalitions battle it out to block each other’s initiatives, and in the process, delay the transformation that would be necessary for the country’s economic take-off, that is long expected.

Jokowi and Kalla

For the neighbouring countries in the ASEAN region, the prospect of an Indonesia caught in the grip of domestic political stalemate is not a positive one, what with ASEAN Economic Integration around the corner, with the ASEAN Economic Community scheduled for next year.

For all these reasons, Indonesia will remain the country to watch in our region, this year and the year to come. And the state of Indonesia’s domestic politics is bound to have a spillover effect on the polities and economies of the region.

8 thoughts on “Congratulations, President Joko Widodo and Vice President Jusuf Kala of Republik Indonesia

  1. The streets of Jakarta today
    http://blogs.wsj.com/searealtime/2014/10/20/as-it-happens-indonesia-inaugurates-joko-widodo-as-president/

    I hope you can see the pictures. ________________
    They are welcoming a man who will change Indonesia with the help of God, Jusuf Kalla and the proud people of Indonesia. You country has everything going for you. All you need is clean politics and honest government. Widodo can provide the lead towards a better future for Indonesia.

  2. Jakarta Globe–October 20, 2014

    Today, Indonesia finally has a new president. With a person like Joko Widodo as our head of state, we should feel blessed and proud.

    The country could do much worse, as we’ve realised after our recent, collective stare into the dark abyss of political divide. We are not a country yet accustomed to contested, much less contentious, elections. The fact that our democracy may live to see another election, even if we are a little worse for wear in the aftermath of our last, is something worth celebrating.

    Joko’s track record offers nothing to complain about. He’s our first president with no ties to former dictator Suharto. He worked his way up from humble beginnings to mayor of Solo, Central Java, then Jakarta governor – at each step proving himself as someone prepared to deliver as a people’s president: hard-working, sincere, honest and clean.

    From planning to execution, he shows critics he knows exactly what he’s doing. He walks his talk. In this corrupt corner of the world, what more could we ask from a leader? Joko has everything worth celebrating to make his presidency a success.

    But every celebration must end, sooner or later. It’s time to face reality: Joko’s administration faces mounting challenges – and they will test him.

    Expectations are so high that he can overcome all manner of challenges – conquering corrupt bureaucratic fiefdoms, rehabilitating years of underinvestment in human resources and infrastructure, structural violence to the people’s hard-won electoral rights – amid a dedicated, organised opposition. Does tempering our expectations mean conceding early defeat of the hope Joko represents?

    High expectations can hurt credibility more than a divided government. Everyone seems loyal on their honeymoon. But it will end. And everyone will seek whatever they expect they can get. – Jakarta Globe, October 20, 2014/The Malaysian Insider.

  3. Cleaning up the bureaucracy of incompetence and corruption is not going to be easy. Indonesia is so embedded in corruption for everything to do with “pemerintah” it will take another 2 decades to clean it up… Joko Widodo is a popular president but despite that he doesn’t have the DPR/MPR with him – these two legislative institutions have 65%+ of opposition lawmakers from the vengeful and vindictive presidential sore loser Jenderal Prabowo… it will not be an easy ride for Jokowi as the new president.

    The truce and peace you see today during the inauguration, in my personal opinion Dato Din, is only temporary as Jenderal Prabowo has no choice because of the highly negative public opinion and lashback he received for master-minding the enactment of a legislation to forego direct elections… soon the gloves will be off again and the knives drawn…
    _________________
    A people’s President backed by an astute Vice President Kalla will survive. At the end of the day, what Indonesians think about his policies and actions matter. Give him a chance.–Din Merican

  4. Oh BTW Dato, since you mentioned you are in constant touch with Zahrain Hashim the ambassador to Indonesia, perhaps you should ask him to change his name card to AMBASSADOR with 2 S instead of being with 1 S… it’s rather embarrassing to see a top government official not able to spell his own position….

  5. Pingback: Joko Widodo Presiden | Radhen Bhoncel Tips & Trik

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