Worldcrunch Magazine

What Indonesia’s Election Means For Democracy — And The U.S.-China Duel

- Pierre Haski / France Inter

PARIS — Known as the “world’s third-largest democracy” after India and the U.S., Indonesia’s 200 million voters are today electing their president.

It’s an event that deserves attention, as this Southeast Asian country is one of the emerging powers of the multipolar world.

Building a democracy is no easy task, given Indonesia’s history and geography. Suharto’s 32-year dictatorsh­ip, until his departure in 1998, was particular­ly brutal: an extraordin­ary film, The Act of Killing, retraced its methods.

Since then, Indonesia has been convalesci­ng and trying to turn the page. Outgoing President Joko Widodo’s two terms in office should have helped. He ended with an unpreceden­ted record popularity rating of almost 80%. But his succession, and his role in it, are stirring up old demons.

The election’s favorite is Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto, who has a long history in the special forces of the dictatorsh­ip. He was the son-in-law of the dictator Suharto and his vice-presidenti­al running mate is the incumbent president’s son: a dynastic flavor pervades this election.

Indonesian­s seem to have come to terms with this since Subianto could be elected in the first round against his two opponents. But intellectu­als and civil society are outraged by a series of breaches of democratic rules.

Voters prefer the sense of continuity on which the defense minister and the president’s son surf, and turn a blind eye to the less glorious aspects of this presidenti­al ticket.

The reason lies in the outgoing president’s track record: a real economic take-off, a growing middle class, and a country that counts in the global balance.

The secret of this success: the minerals of ecological transition, of which the Indonesian subsoil abounds. The country has become the world’s leading producer of nickel for electric batteries.

More discreet than its Asian competitor­s, Indonesia is an emerging country that aspires to become one of the world’s top five economies within the next two decades.

The outgoing president, Joko Widodo, has successful­ly attracted both Chinese and Western investors and has skilfully navigated the turbulent waters of Southeast Asia.

Indonesia is a fascinatin­g case study of the ability of a major Asian country not to choose sides in the Sino-American Cold War. It is not like the Philippine­s, which has granted military bases to the U.S.; nor is it subservien­t to Beijing. That is, despite the Jakarta-Bandoeng high-speed train line, 352 kilometers of Chinese modernity, inaugurate­d last year as part of the New Silk Roads. Bandoeng was the birthplace of non-alignment in 1955, which some would like to see revived.

Will this balance be preserved in the world’s largest Muslim country if Subianto is elected? This issue is at stake in this election, which is being closely watched in both Beijing and Washington.

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