South China Morning Post

PRABOWO TO COURT RIVALS TO ‘EXPAND WINGS OF COALITION’

Biggest challenge for president-elect will be persuading the ruling PDI-P to join him in government

- Resty Woro Yuniar restyworo.yuniar@scmp.com

After being certified the winner of Indonesia’s February 14 polls, president-elect Prabowo Subianto is expected to spend the next few months trying to persuade former rivals to join his coalition, though a few have already indicated their willingnes­s to ally with him.

Analysts believe Prabowo is likely to form a grand coalition with minimal opposition, an outcome that would accelerate his legislativ­e agenda, but potentiall­y erode the country’s democracy due to a lack of checks on his power.

Prabowo, who currently serves as the country’s defence minister and leads the Greater Indonesia Movement Party (Gerindra), was officially declared president-elect by the General Elections Commission on Wednesday. This followed the Constituti­onal Court’s rejection of petitions filed by his election rivals, Anies Baswedan and Ganjar Pranowo, who had sought a revote over allegation­s of voter fraud and state interferen­ce by incumbent President Joko Widodo.

Widodo has been accused of intervenin­g in the election and throwing his tacit support behind Prabowo, whose running mate, Gibran Rakabuming Raka, is the president’s eldest son.

After his victory was made official, the 74-year-old former general gave a speech calling for unity “to achieve the ideals that our nation hopes for”.

“But after this, the people demanded that all leadership elements must work together. We must collaborat­e to bring goodness, to bring prosperity, to eliminate poverty, to eliminate hunger, to eliminate corruption in the Indonesian nation,” he said.

The National Democratic Party (Nasdem), which supported Anies in the election and won 10 per cent of the vote, was the first to confirm it was ready to join Prabowo’s coalition, with Nasdem chief Surya Paloh telling reporters his party was prepared to offer its “full support” after he met the president-elect on Thursday.

Prabowo also reconciled with election rival Muhaimin Iskandar – the chairman of Islamic-leaning National Awakening Party (PKB) who was Anies’ running mate – signalling PKB would also likely align with any coalition.

“PKB and Gerindra … have been working together in parliament and the executive [branch], and we want to continue to work together more productive­ly,” Muhaimin said on Wednesday.

Prabowo said the two want to “continue to work together … to achieve our goals of eliminatin­g poverty, hunger, corruption, and bringing prosperity”.

The Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), another Islamist party that supported Anies’ candidacy, has not indicated if it would ally itself with Prabowo, with its chairman Ahmad Syaiku saying the party “will maintain a critical stance”.

Prabowo’s early moves as the official president-elect underline his intent to “expand the wings of his coalition”, a strategy that relies on “attractive offers” for political parties such as ministeria­l posts or cushy positions at state-owned companies, said Nicky Fahrizal, political researcher at the Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies Indonesia (CSIS).

“Prabowo needs political stability. He has calculated that there is no tradition of an effective or well-coordinate­d opposition [in Indonesia], so it is better to invite as many political parties as possible, [including those] who were at odds with him,” Fahrizal said.

The biggest challenge for Prabowo will be in persuading the ruling party, the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), to join his coalition.

PDI-P was the biggest winner of February’s legislativ­e elections, earning 16.72 per cent of the vote, edging out the Golkar party which received 15.29 per cent. Prabowo’s Gerindra party came third with 13.22 per cent.

While PDI-P’s victory was not as substantia­l as in 2019 when it captured nearly three per cent more of the vote, it could still pose a significan­t obstacle for the incoming president if it decides to become the opposition.

Dahnil Simanjutak, Prabowo’s spokesman, said on Thursday that PDI-P’s chairwoman, former president Megawati Sukarnoput­ri, would meet Prabowo soon. The president-elect was her vice-presidenti­al running mate in 2009.

Analysts said that it might be difficult for Prabowo to persuade PDI-P to join his coalition due to the animosity between Megawati and Widodo, following the president’s decision to support Prabowo and Gibran’s ticket instead of PDI-P’s presidenti­al candidate Ganjar.

PDI-P had long supported Widodo and his family members in various elections, including Widodo’s presidenti­al campaigns in 2014 and 2019, as well as Gibran’s mayoral run for the city of Solo in 2021.

On Monday, Komarudin Watubun, chairman of the PDIP central leadership council for honorary affairs, said that both Widodo and Gibran were no longer PDI-P members since they “have crossed the aisle” by joining Prabowo’s campaign.

“This statement reflects that PDI-P no longer has any ties or closeness to Jokowi and Gibran,” said Firman Noor, political researcher with the Jakarta-based National Research and Innovation Agency, referring to Widodo’s popular nickname.

Despite the discord, Alexander Arifianto, senior fellow with the Indonesia programme at S Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in Singapore, said that there was “a big chance” that PDI-P would join Prabowo’s coalition.

“Prabowo has a pretty good personal relationsh­ip with Megawati. They can get along. For PDI-P to join the coalition, they would want Prabowo to minimise Jokowi’s role in Prabowo’s future government. The problem is whether Prabowo can fulfil this request or not?” Arifianto said.

The party’s leaders are set to announce their decision after a national meeting next month.

Arifianto argued that while Prabowo having a big coalition would ensure a stable government supportive of his agenda, it would come with a weakness.

“Once they have entered a coalition, they can no longer be critical of any mistakes that occurred in the regime, such as corruption, or other scandals that arise. They cannot be critical and the checks and balance system does not work,” he said.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Indonesia’s president-elect Prabowo Subianto and vice president-elect Gibran Rakabuming Raka have a coalition to build.
Photo: AFP Indonesia’s president-elect Prabowo Subianto and vice president-elect Gibran Rakabuming Raka have a coalition to build.

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