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Pemilu Presiden, Legislatif, Pilkada

Pilpres

Kajian
Highest vote, party lists and women
2008-12-27
The Constitutional Court has once again demonstrated visionary clarity when considering an issue of citizens rights. The case concerned whether it was constitutional for parties to determine not only who their candidates would be, but more importantly to determine which of them would win first regardless of the expressed preference of voters. The Court ruled in favour of the citizen as voter. The immediate impact of this decision (assuming it can be applied) will be to remove one source of foreseeable but totally unnecessary internal party conflict after the elections. Since the passage of the election law a few months ago, parties and candidates have been falling over each other to sign various "contracts" declaring they will defer to their party candidate who gets the most popular votes. The obvious problem with all this sudden concern for voter preferences was that it was actually against the law. The Constitutional Court verdict removes this problem by stating that whatever "contracts" may or may not have been signed, voter preference shall rule. It would have been interesting to see if the favoured son or daughter of a party central board on a candidate list defeated in the vote by a local candidate would have remained so committed to these "contracts" or whether the law itself would have been dusted off to be applied. In any case the outcome would be fairly predictable − court cases, mid−term−seat−swapping and other political trades and deals, of a kind not seen since the 1999 elections. Removing this kind of undignified conflict is a healthy outcome from this Constitutional Court verdict. On the down side party conflict now moves from the post−election to the campaign period. In many respects the key competitor for a candidate now will be from her/his own party. Each candidate on the list now has more or less the same chance of winning. The is no longer a list "leader". As a result internal team discipline will be harder to maintain. For example if the party is sure of getting 1 but probably not 2 seats, one would expect most candidate energy to be directed to ensure they get 1 more vote than any of their opponents. If the party is assured of 2 but probably not 3, the same goes for candidates competing to ensure they are among the top 2 vote getters for their party. As a result we would expect that if the option is to secure 1 certain seat through knocking off your fellow party member or working hard together to possibly get a second seat, most would choose the first option. The only exception would be the case of a "militant" party − by which I mean a party whose members actually have a commitment to the party which exceeds their own personal career hopes. I think it fair to say one could count the number of such parties in Indonesia on 1 hand. For candidates of most parties therefore the incentive will not always be to 27 December 2008 maximise the collective vote for their party. This is not in the obvious interests of their parties as such. The implication here will be a shift from inter−party election contestation to intra−party election contestation. If I am not wrong, Indonesians generally aspire to being a country having a few strong, coherent, stable and effective political parties. If so, guaranteeing this kind of intra−party conflict on the campaign trail is unlikely to achieve this objective. The core change to emerge from this Constitutional Court verdict is that the parties have now lost control over their party lists. They still control the right to select their candidates. But they no longer control the order in which their candidates are elected. For the first time in the history of the Republic the parties have to seriously share power over candidate victory with the voters. The natural response by the parties will be to seek a system that again provides them with a greater capacity to direct which of their candidates is most likely to win. They could try arguing for a return to a fully closed candidate list, but that is no longer likely to be feasible politically. It would be a very brave political party indeed that would argue to wind the clock back that far − even after an election. One interesting response would be that the parties conclude that offering multiple candidates is simply too risky. The answer to this problem surprisingly would be to use 1 candidate electorates such as a "district system" or proportional based electorates which elect 2 or at most 3 people. Historically Indonesian parties have almost always rejected district systems − preferring proportional systems which lend themselves more easily to powerful central party board control. The key advantage central party boards had to place their preferred candidates in winnable positions on long party lists has now been lost. The new best choice they now confront will be to place their preferred candidates in their most winnable electorates without worrying that someone else from within the party might win instead. Additionally in district systems (except perhaps the USA) intra−party contestation over candidate selection occurs before the campaign, thus minimising damaging intra−party brawls that will lose a party votes on the campaign trail. Beyond the parties other groups will need now to rethink their strategies. One such group will be activists promoting more women in politics. They have argued eloquently and tirelessly to "lock" women into the candidate lists both by increasing the proportion of women as candidates and more recently by ensuring that women candidates are placed high up the party lists. This strategy has just been rendered irrelevant as the Court verdict says it is up to the voters to choose their preferred candidates. 27 December 2008 Ironically it may be that fewer women candidates could actually lead to more being elected. This is because the activists could congregate their support behind specific candidates rather than splintering support across many women candidates. My own extensive study of the 2004 and 2009 candidate lists for the DPR shows a modest increase in the total number of women candidates − up 1% to just under 35%. Meanwhile the percentage placed at number 1 spots rose 3% to 18% of all candidate lists. Considering other issues of likelihood of winning based upon past voting patterns, I concluded that the actual number of women to be elected would be essentially unchanged from 2004. It will be very interesting to see if directly electing candidates leads to more or less women than a closed list. Experience with the DPD, where only 9% of candidates were women yet 21% of candidates elected were women, suggests strongly that voters have no problems voting for women. Notable too was that woman candidates were the top vote getters in 25% of the provinces. The fact that only 9% of candidates to the DPD were women suggests that there are other factors that inhibit women from playing a fuller role in politics. As there are no parties in the DPD, the old scape−goat argument of blaming the parties for inhibiting women is not relevant. Here the resistance is likely to come from much closer to home − the immediate and wider family and the neighbourhood where the women live. Ironically this exists at the same time as these same voters seem quite happy to vote for some other woman − just not one of their own. This suggests that the campaign to encourage more women to be active politically needs to target more than legal regulations and lobbying parties − important as this remains. A deeper dialogue with the broader community is also needed, as is the need to provide support and "tips" for women on how to handle the "opposition from within" should they develop an interest in politics. One other phenomena to watch from this court verdict will be whether local candidates fair better at getting elected vis a vis those candidates who come from the Jakarta metropolitan region. Some 55% of all candidates to the DPR from across Indonesia live in or around Jakarta. And these figures actually exclude figures for the 7 electorates that are in and around the Jakarta region itself. This extraordinary concentration of candidacy to people from around the capital is actually an improvement from 2004 when the figure reached 61%. It is clear that the verdict from the Constitutional Court was a major step forward in terms of empowering the voters. Equally interesting to see will be the longer term ramifications following the elections as people begin again to re−negotiate the relationships between voters, parties and candidates. 27 December 2008
An abridged version of this document appeared in The Jakarta Post of 27 December 2008 under the title of "The Consittutional Court chooses for the people"

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