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Thumbs down to Jokowi'€™s 100-day government

After 100 days in power, President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo and his Cabinet have been given a thumbs down from politicians, activists and political analysts who say that the current government has yet to enact tough policies on law enforcement, corruption and bureaucratic reform, and that the President remains in thrall to his political benefactors

Ridwan Max Sijabat (The Jakarta Post)
Jakarta
Wed, January 28, 2015

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Thumbs down to Jokowi'€™s 100-day government

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fter 100 days in power, President Joko '€œJokowi'€ Widodo and his Cabinet have been given a thumbs down from politicians, activists and political analysts who say that the current government has yet to enact tough policies on law enforcement, corruption and bureaucratic reform, and that the President remains in thrall to his political benefactors.

Former president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono'€™s Democratic Party (PD) said it had yet to see any significant progress and changes since Jokowi was sworn in as president on Oct. 20, 2014.

'€œI don'€™t know what the government has done after 100 days in power. Do you? What I am seeing is that conflict in certain fields is mounting. But let'€™s give Jokowi a chance to solve the problem,'€ Yudhoyono told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.

Pramono Anung Wibowo and Effendi Simbolon, two senior figures in the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), winner of the 2014 legislative elections and the party that back Jokowi in the presidential election, admitted that the President and his government had yet to see significant progress because Jokowi had been weak from the outset in choosing his Cabinet.

'€œJokowi began by recruiting several unqualified ministers into his Cabinet, raising fuel prices without any anticipation of the rise in world oil prices and distributing Indonesia Health Cards [KIS] with the distribution of Prosperous Indonesia Cards [KIS] and Indonesia Smart Cards [KIP] in compensation to low-income people,'€ said Effendi.

He added that Jokowi had failed to show strong leadership in handling the mounting conflict between the police and the Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK).

Pramono concurred and said Jokowi'€™s '€˜blusukan'€™ (impromptu field visit) program had yet to make changes to society.

'€œHe has make a series of '€˜blusukan'€™ to Papua, Kalimantan and Sumatra but many major problems in those regions have remained unresolved,'€ he complained.

Coordinator of Indonesian Corruption Watch (ICW) Ade Irawan said he was disappointed with Jokowi'€™s failure to fulfill his campaign promise to intensify the war on corruption.

'€œThe President has no clear policy on corruption eradication as indicated by his decision to nominate Comr. Gen. Budi Gunawan as police chief candidate even though [Budi] had been named a graft suspect by the KPK,'€ Ade said, adding that Jokowi also gave the impression to the public that he didn'€™t have the courage to take tough measures in bridging the widening police-KPK rift.

Nico Harjanto, political analyst at the Populi Center, said the accumulating problems faced by the current government had a lot to do with the President'€™s inability to say '€œno'€ to his supporting parties.

'€œJokowi is apparently running his government under the shadows of his supporting parties. This is indicated by the President'€™s decision to appoint the new attorney general and the nomination of Budi Gunawan,'€ he said.

Jokowi turned a deaf ear to public protests when he appointed Nasdem Party politician Prasetyo as attorney general and when he declined to drop the nomination of Budi.

Villages, Disadvantaged Regions and Transmigration Minister Marwan Djaffar said the absence of significant progress had a lot to do with the slow bureaucratic engine as shown by the slow formation of portfolios in the ministries and non-ministerial state institutions.

'€œThe current government should speed up the formation of portfolios and bureaucratic reform because no significant progress will be achieved without full support from the bureaucracy,'€ he said during a recent visit to The Jakarta Post.

Arie Sudjito, political analyst at Gadjah Mada University in Yogyakarta, said despite the problems, Jokowi had made some progress in launching the '€œmental revolution'€ by instructing his Cabinet to work harder for the sake of the people.

'€œThis is a good start in carrying out development programs, including the war on corruption,'€ Arie said, adding that Jokowi had showed his capacity as a statesman by declining to interfere in the KPK and the National Police'€™s respective investigations into the Bambang and Budi cases.

Rieke Diyah Pitaloka, another PDI-P politician, said the existing and emerging problems would be opportunities for Jokowi and his government to make significant progress in the coming years.

'€œ100 days are too short for Jokowi and his government to make significant changes. But with the existing problems, the President and his Cabinet will have enough evaluation materials to enhance solidity and coordination to make major achievements in the future,'€ she claimed. (***)

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