Jokowi in the Covid Era: Repressive Pluralism, Dynasticism and the Over-Bearing State
Abstract
The Covid-19 pandemic has thrown President Joko Widodo’s second-term plans into
disarray. Jokowi’s aspiration for dramatically accelerated development between 2019
and 2024 to secure his legacy as a transformative president now appears unachievable. As he has grappled with managing the pandemic and salvaging key parts of
his agenda, he has consistently prioritised the economy over public health, and has
also abandoned commitments to uphold or strengthen an array of political and civil
rights that are crucial to the quality of Indonesian democracy. He has allowed the
military and intelligence services to greatly expand their role in public life, and his
government has, in the name of defending Indonesian pluralism, initiated discriminatory measures against sections of the Islamist community, which the government
sees as sectarian and intolerant. The president’s reformist credentials have also been
dented by Jokowi’s decision to support the nominations of his son and son-in-law in
mayoral elections in two major cities, bringing accusations of dynasticism and elitism.
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Source
Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies
Type
Book Title
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Restricted until
2099-12-31