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View all search resultsLooming large: NasDem Party chairman Surya Paloh delivers his speech during the party’s national congress on Jan
span style="width: 510px;">Looming large: NasDem Party chairman Surya Paloh delivers his speech during the party’s national congress on Jan. 25, during which he took over the party leadership from Patrice Rio Cappella. Surya decided to take the party back following the rise of media magnate Hary Tanoesodibjo within the party. (JP/Jerry Adiguna)
People react
differently to authoritarian leadership. Some put up with the pressure
before bowing out quietly, while others choose to fight back, sometimes
with great fanfare.
Realizing that he had no future in the newly
founded National Democratic (NasDem) Party, media tycoon Hary
Tanoesoedibjo decided to leave the party for the People’s Conscience
Party (Hanura) early this year, following his rift with NasDem’s
founder, Surya Paloh.
In a fight against Hary for control of the
party, Surya took over the leadership from Patrice Rio Capella earlier
this year. Surya feared that Hary would use his wealth to buy influence
within the party, which Surya had personally set up as a splinter
faction from the Golkar Party in February 2010.
With his decision
to take over the party’s leadership, Surya followed the footsteps of
patrons of major political parties in the country like President Susilo
Bambang Yudhoyono, Megawati Soekarnoputri and Gen. (ret.) Wiranto in
shutting down democratic processes within their parties in favor of
unchallenged leadership.
It remains to be seen if Hary will meet a similar challenge from Wiranto, the chairman of Hanura.
Hary
joined Hanura soon after leaving NasDem and now serves as chairman of
Hanura’s board of patrons. For now, Hary’s position seems secure, with
his financial contribution giving a new lease of life to the party.
“Pak
Hary uniting with this party will be a strategic boost for us in the
elections because we will have a wider opportunity to introduce Hanura
to the Indonesian public through his media companies,” Wiranto told The
Jakarta Post recently.
The campaign to challenge the domination
of Yudhoyono as the Democratic Party’s chief patron was waged by the
former party chairman Anas Urbaningrum.
Anas has publicly
challenged Yudhoyono, the party’s chief patron, ever since he was
officially named a graft suspect by the Corruption Eradication
Commission (KPK) last month, a decision that Anas believes was
politically motivated.
Anas left the party following his decision
to sign an integrity pact, Yudhoyono’s idea, which included a pledge
from the signatory to resign from the party at any level if named a
suspect for any criminal act including corruption, drug abuse or
terrorism.
Anas is now fighting back by mobilizing his supporters
at the local level to vote a for new party chairman who will form an
alliance with the former chairman.
Many have said that the
endgame for the battle could be that Yudhoyono will lose his party just
as former president Abdurrahman “Gus Dur” Wahid lost the National
Awakening Party (PKB) to a splinter faction led by Muhaimin Iskandar.
Yudhoyono
certainly did not want to see Anas taking over the political party that
he set up as a vehicle for his presidential candidacy in 2004.
Particularly after seeing the man he backed for the party’s leadership
in 2010, Andi Mallarangeng, lose to Anas.
Many have linked Anas’ departure to his growing influence within the party.
“Yudhoyono
was the reason for the establishment of the Democratic Party. He is the
‘sun’ of the party, and he will remain the center of power. No second
sun is allowed,” political analyst Hanta Yuda from the Poll Tracking
Institute said.
Soon after Anas left his position, Yudhoyono
moved quickly to install his supporters; deputy chairmen Max Sopacua and
Jhonny Alen Marbun, his son Edhie “Ibas” Baskoro Yudhoyono, who is also
the party’s secretary-general, and party executive director Toto
Riyanto, as the party’s interim leaders pending an extraordinary party
congress to elect a new chairman.
Democratic party leaders insisted that this was a type of democracy that the party had been practicing.
“The
Democratic Party is indeed a democratic party, whatever people might
say out there. Just let us take care of ourselves,” Nurhayati Ali
Assegaf, the leader of the party in the House of Representatives said.
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