All hail, Queen Mega
This week Indonesian streets are bursting with red and white
bunting, celebrating the late leader Soekarno’s proclamation of independence
from the Netherlands on 17 August 1945.
Then followed a four- year protracted guerilla war against
the stubborn Dutch who couldn’t sniff the stench of post-war rotting colonialism. After an estimated 150,000 deaths, the
majority civilians, the United States of Indonesia was internationally
recognized. Australian unions were active
supporters of the revolutionaries.
Queen Juliana abandoned her Asian possessions and for decades
the new nation was a republican patriarchy.
Now the people next door have a de-facto monarch – Megawati
Soekarnoputri.
At her party’s fifth congress in Bali
this month the 72-year old Grandma stamped her feet and authority on the politics
of a nation where the median age is 30.
Although Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo, 58, is the elected president,
Megawati is she who must be obeyed. Nepotism
thrives in the nation’s most popular party with ‘democratic’ redundant in its
title.
In 1965 Soekarno was deposed after a coup allegedly
engineered by the Communist Party. The
late General Soeharto (1921-2008) grabbed the Presidency till he was felled in
1998 when the economy crashed.
During his authoritarian rule bids by Soekarno’s family to
squeeze back into politics were crushed.
When the first president died in 1970 his body was whisked to the
distant East Java town of Blitar so his grave wouldn’t
become a shrine for Jakarta
subversives. (It’s now a mausoleum and
draws huge crowds of pilgrims daily.)
Soekarno had nine wives and 11 kids. Megawati was his second child and first daughter. Her patronym is supposed to mean ‘cloud
goddess’.
Mega, as she’s widely known, had little public life till the
mid 1980s when she joined the Soeharto-sanctioned Partai Demokrasi Indonesia
(PDI). She was considered a harmless
Mum so to honour her Dad (now titled Proklamator) she was allowed a seat in the
House of Representatives (DPR).
This was a puppet parliament in the steel grip of Soeharto
and the military, but it gave Mega a platform to promote paterfamilias’ secular
nationalism, though now much diluted by political Islam.
Soeharto got nervous so organised a split of PDI members and
thugs to break up a meeting. In the following riots five died and 23 went
‘missing’.
By then the long-oppressed press was getting braver in
reporting dirty tricks so Mega became a focal point for dissenters. The PDI was
renamed PDI-P, the last initial standing for Perjuangan, meaning ‘Struggle’. Soeharto’s Golkar Party, which always won
elections, began to crumble.
With the shunt to
democracy this century Mega became fifth president by accident. She was vice president appointed by the legislature
to the reformist but erratic Abdurrahman
(Gus Dur) Wahid. In 2001 he quit after
being threatened with impeachment so she got bumped into the top job.
Little happened during
her dull reign, with commentators quipping she left the Army to run the show
while she went on manoeuvres in shopping malls.
Madam has the magic name but not Soekarno’s charisma and oratorical
skills which terrified Australia
when he condemned the West at huge rallies during the Cold War.
The voters could see
behind the image and wanted reform. In
2004 Mega lost to one of her ministers Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (SBY) in the
first direct election by the people.
She stood again in 2009 and was heavily trounced by the same man,
becoming a splendid hater.
In the 2014 presidential
election she belatedly ordered the PDI-P to endorse Widodo, then Governor of
Jakarta. Even after he won Mega called him a ‘functionary’ in public. For her the former furniture salesman who’d
been elected by popular vote owed his success to her regal recognition.
Most political
observers thought otherwise and attributed Widodo’s win to his humility and
ability to connect with the wong cilik,
the wee folk who make up the bulk of the electorate.
In this year’s elections
Widodo garnered a second five-year term; the PDI-P collected the top position overall
with almost 20 per cent of the votes.
Twenty parties contested, but only nine won seats.
Now Mega is scheming
to get either Puan Maharani, 45, to take over the party so she can
contest the presidency in 2024, or her half-brother Prananda Prabowo, 49.
(He’s no relation
to Prabowo Subianto, the bitter losing contestant in this year’s presidential
contest, who also attended the PDI-P congress.
That’s like Bill Shorten getting VIP treatment at a Liberal victory
knees-up where Scott Morrison’s offspring are offered a clearway to future
power.)
Red-jacketed PDI-P
Congress delegates endorsed Mega as chairwoman without the messy business of
voting. Any policies on the agenda were swamped by personalities.
She told Widodo publicly
to include many PDI-P members in the Cabinet he’s forming ahead of his October swearing
in.
Under the
Indonesian system ministers can be appointed from outside politics. Widodo is known to favour technocrats and
promotion on merit, but is fettered by Mega’s chains and those of minor parties
coalescing with PDI-P.
When Widodo first
took office Mega reportedly pumped up the pressure to slip her friends into key
positions, including the military. He had to make her daughter Puan Coordinating
Minister for Human Development and Cultural Affairs; the lady has yet to
display any notable qualities that warrant high office other than bloodline.
The Constitution
prevents Widodo from standing again, so he no longer needs the sovereign’s patronage.
As a mild-mannered
Javanese in a culture which respects the elderly, regicide is not an option. But with five years’ experience of running
the world’s third largest democracy, Widodo has built a stand-alone reputation
so may quietly find ways to step around the throne.
First published in Pearls and Irritataions, 13 August 2019
http://johnmenadue.com/duncan-graham-all-hail-queen-mega/
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