New Form of
Government: President-Elect Joko Widodo wants any appointed minister in his
cabinet to give up roles within political parties
Jakarta Globe, Deti Purnamasari & Hotman Siregar, Aug 12, 2014
Jakarta. President-Elect Joko Widodo has reiterated that the coalition that he is building with political parties is unconditional, meaning that there will be no proportional power sharing with political parties.
President-Elect Joko Widodo appears with members of his transition team in Jakarta on Aug. 4, 2014. (Antara Photo/Widodo S. Jusuf) |
Jakarta. President-Elect Joko Widodo has reiterated that the coalition that he is building with political parties is unconditional, meaning that there will be no proportional power sharing with political parties.
Joko
maintained that his cabinet will be filled with professionals, either from
political parties or independent ones. He also indicated that he wanted to
reduce ministerial positions within the cabinet.
“I have
mentioned previously about the conditions when establishing the coalition. They
already know the answer: it is unconditional,” Joko, who is still Jakarta’s
governor and also goes by Jokowi, said at City Hall on Tuesday.
Indonesian
Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) senior politician Pramono Anung defended
Joko’s decision to not fill his entire cabinet with politicians, saying that
the move was not meant to disrespect political parties but instead reflected a
mature democratic process.
Pramono
cited the United States as an example in which public officials, would
relinquish their positions in political parties once elected.
“In the US,
[people] in the government are not political party officials. Take, for
instance, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton and others,” Pramono said, referring to
the US president and the former state secretary.
Pramono
called on coalition parties to accept Joko’s decision, adding that it was the
prerogative of the president-elect to make such choices.
Pramono,
who is also the deputy speaker of the House of Representatives, says that the
functions between political parties and government are separate in a modern
democracy.
He said
Joko’s move was a first in Indonesia’s presidential history.
“This is a
genuinely new idea. Based on what I see in the presidential history, Jokowi
does not have direct control on political parties. But I appreciate [Joko’s
move] if he builds a new tradition like this,” he said.
Most
importantly for Joko, Pramono added, is that the president-elect should elect
ministers with no political baggage, such as involvement in corruption cases.
Pramono
said that in order to pick ministers with clean track records, the Corruption
Eradication Commission (KPK) has data on public officials who have been
involved in graft cases and he can dismiss such individuals.
Muhammad
Yamin, chairman of the Jokowi National Secretariat, a supporters group, hoped
that Joko would choose non-politicians to fill his cabinet.
“We will
monitor and support the house of transition. With regards to the pros and cons,
we hope that the cabinet [members] who are elected have no political
background,” said Yamin on Tuesday.
Sihol
Manullang, chairman of Joko’s volunteer group Projo, also expressed the same
view, saying that choosing ministers with no political background will help
Joko avoid the trap of accommodating various political parties’ interests.
“I’m sure
Jokowi will not be trapped [to accommodate the interests] of political parties.
We’re here to protect him from such traps set by political parties,” Sihol
said.
Budi Arie
Setiadi, coordinator of Joko’s volunteers, envisions no problem if Joko’s
cabinet is filled with politicians who are professionals and care about the
public.
“If they
don’t care about the people, we will drag them in and hold them accountable for
their performance,” said Budi.
Slim
cabinet
Joko also
said that he will form a smaller cabinet and that he would remove the position
of deputy ministers in most ministries as part of his budget efficiency
measure. There are 34 ministers in President Yudhoyono Susilo Bambang
Yudhoyono’s cabinet, and some have deputy officials. A president has the
exclusive privilege of appointing ministers to fill positions that he feels are
necessary.
“It depends
on the [condition] of every ministry, and it’s related to the budget burden,
and the burden is not exactly light. It [the deputy minister’s position] can be
removed, or maybe only one or two ministers will get deputy ministers,” said
Joko.
Despite
already disclosing his plan to remove the deputy minister’s role, Joko was
still reluctant to talk about candidates who would fill his cabinet.
Joko said
that his team would start considering names in mid-September or following the
resolution of the presidential election dispute at the Constitutional Court.
The court will issue its ruling, which becomes final, on Aug. 22.
Prabowo
Subianto, Joko’s contender in the presidential election, challenged the ruling
General Election Commission (KPU), which declared Joko as the winner. Prabawo
alleged fraud in the election that benefited Joko.
Joko said
that his transition team is still identifying problems in the government’s
bureaucracy as well as formulating programs that will be prioritized.
Identifying
problems and formulating priority programs would ensure a smooth transition of
power from Yudhoyono’s administration to Joko’s.
“We haven’t
advancted to [selecting] names [of cabinet ministers] yet. The team is
preparing a transition from the SBY administration,” Joko said, referring to
Yudhoyono by his initials.
The
transition team is headed by Rini M.S. Soewandi, the former industry and trade
minister during Megawati Soekarnoputri’s presidency. Rini is being assisted by
four deputies, namely PDI-P deputy secretary-general Hasto Kristianto;
secretaries of Joko’s campaign team Andi Widjajanto and Akbar Faisal; and
Joko’s campaign team spokesman Anies Baswedan.
The tasks
of the transition team include drafting programs and policies for Joko’s
administration and to help find cabinet ministers based on Joko’s needs.
Akbar said
that the first criterion to become a cabinet minister was not competence but
courage.
“Pak Jokowi
has set three criteria, the courage to take action, being clean and being
competent. The first is not competence but the courage to take action,” Akbar
stressed. “It’s not a matter of who but whether [that appointed minister] can
or is able to take a stand.”
Akbar also
said that the transition team was working according to Joko’s style and that
their duties would finish at the end of September.
“Right now
we are preparing the mechanism of the programs, and we will leave it up to the
president [elect] and the vice president [elect] to choose the ministers,” said
Akbar.
Joko has
also asked Deputy Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama to offer suggestions on
people who would make a good fit in his cabinet. Joko, though, declined to
disclose Basuki’s suggestions.
Political
analyst Arbi Sanit hoped that Joko and vice president-elect Jusuf Kalla would
eliminate three ministries to prevent overlapping in coordinating policies, and
that ultimately there should be only 20 ministries in his cabinet.
He cited
the position of the coordinating ministry of the economy, for instance, which
failed to coordinate the distribution of cooking gas to households following increases
in subsidized fuel prices and problems related to food imports.
“SBY’s
cabinet has been very ineffective. There has been an overlapping of [policies]
between the agriculture minister and the trade minister on those cases,” Arbi
said.
He said
that Joko should liquidate the Religious Affairs Ministry, the Sports and Youth
Affairs Ministry, the Research and Technology Ministry, the Maritime Ministry,
the Manpower Ministry, the Industry Ministry and the three coordinating
ministries for economy, security and the people’s welfare.
Arbi said
that those ministries are only wasting the state’s budget and have made the
government ineffective.
“In the
future, Jokowi should have only 20 ministers. The Public Works Ministry can be
merged with the Transportation Ministry and the National Land Agency. The
Social Affairs Ministry can be merged with the Health Ministry,” he said.
Papua
People’s Council (MRP) chairman Vitalis Yumte said that the new government
should consider setting up a new ministry to handle provinces with special
privileges such as Aceh, Papua, Yogyakarta, and Jakarta.
“As for
Papua, we really need a ministry to handle Papua issues so that all the
problems can be solved quickly and effectively,” said Vitalis.
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