TY - JOUR
T1 - Elite opposition and popular rejection
T2 - the failure of presidential term limit evasion in Widodo’s Indonesia
AU - Mietzner, Marcus
AU - Honna, Jun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 SOAS University of London.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - In recent years, there has been an increasing body of scholarship analyzing the conditions under which incumbent presidents can launch successful attempts to evade existing term limits. It has generally been found that if presidents use multi-strategy approaches, the probability of their success is high. Failure of term limit evasion, on the other hand, is typically ascribed to opposition by judges or to popular disapproval. The case of Indonesia, presented in this article, challenges some of these assumptions. We show that President Widodo’s attempts to achieve a revision of term limit regulations or to delay the next elections failed despite a determined multi-strategy approach, and they did so primarily because of sustained elite opposition, including from his own party. Judges played no role, and popular rejection was relevant only insofar as it aligned with elite attitudes. Widodo’s failed term evasion attempts, then, highlight two contradictory trends in Indonesia’s contemporary democracy: they demonstrated both the erosion of democratic culture that made the initiative possible and the continued resilience of democracy that ultimately thwarted the plan.
AB - In recent years, there has been an increasing body of scholarship analyzing the conditions under which incumbent presidents can launch successful attempts to evade existing term limits. It has generally been found that if presidents use multi-strategy approaches, the probability of their success is high. Failure of term limit evasion, on the other hand, is typically ascribed to opposition by judges or to popular disapproval. The case of Indonesia, presented in this article, challenges some of these assumptions. We show that President Widodo’s attempts to achieve a revision of term limit regulations or to delay the next elections failed despite a determined multi-strategy approach, and they did so primarily because of sustained elite opposition, including from his own party. Judges played no role, and popular rejection was relevant only insofar as it aligned with elite attitudes. Widodo’s failed term evasion attempts, then, highlight two contradictory trends in Indonesia’s contemporary democracy: they demonstrated both the erosion of democratic culture that made the initiative possible and the continued resilience of democracy that ultimately thwarted the plan.
KW - Indonesia
KW - democratic backsliding
KW - democratization
KW - presidentialism
KW - term limits
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85166672977&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/0967828X.2023.2236542
DO - 10.1080/0967828X.2023.2236542
M3 - Article
SN - 0967-828X
VL - 31
SP - 115
EP - 131
JO - South East Asia Research
JF - South East Asia Research
IS - 2
ER -