Party Elites and Centralized Selection of Regional Head Candidates
Muhammad Ikhsan, Subhilhar, Heri Kusmanto
a
and Indra Kesuma Nasution
b
University of Sumatera Utara, Indonesia
Keywords: Candidacy, Regional Head, Political Elite, Political Parties, Mayor Election.
Abstract: This paper is derived from an ongoing dissertation research, this research wants to capture the process of
selecting candidates/candidacy for regional heads in the 2020 Medan city mayor elections. There are strong
indications that in the process of candidacy of regional head candidates by political parties, the process was
undemocratic and full of elite interests, rather than the volition of grassroots party cadres and constituent
communities. The dynamics of discord within the party structure and the dismissal of cadres are signs of a
mismatch between the voices of the bottom line and the elite of political parties in deciding which candidates
will be nominated. UU no. 2 of 2011 concerning Political Parties, has mandated political parties that the
recruitment of candidates for regional heads and their representatives must be carried out in a democratic and
open manner. In this article, the author wants to elaborate on the phenomenon of the centrality of the
candidacy of regional head candidates in Indonesia, which is associated with the intervention of political elites
and oligarchs in political parties and their impact on the development of local democracy.
1 BACKGROUND
Ideally, political parties are to mobilize the people,
represent certain interests, and provide a way of
compromise for conflicting opinions. The role of
political parties as a means of recruitment is to select
prepared cadres, and to strive for the placement of
qualified, possess, and experienced cadres and to get
support from the community in strategic political
positions (Farisi and Haryadi 2017).
Political parties that are centralized and
unresponsive to aspirations from below, and oligarchs
that control or dominate political parties and the
practice of clientelism in getting votes in elections,
have saturated Indonesia's electoral democracy
(Aspinall, Edward & Berenschot 2019).
In many parties, the process of determining
candidates who will take part in the elections is
carried out in a very closed manner, not only to the
wider community but also to party administrators at
the regional level. The Central Executive Board of
political parties (DPP) in Indonesia has full authority
to determine who is approved to be carried by his
party in each pilkada. This determination may involve
or be known to the regional administrators, but also
a
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1370-7876
b
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2699-3405
without involving or even notifying the regional
administrators if there is a tendency for differences in
interests between the central and regional
administrators to appear (Purwaningsih, Eka, and
Widodo n.d.).
If we examine the regulations governing political
parties, namely Law no. 2 of 2011 concerning
Amendments to Law Number 2 of 2008 concerning
Political Parties, there is an article that mentions
political recruitment, namely Article 29 paragraph (1)
which reads:
“Partai Politik melakukan rekrutmen terhadap
warga negara Indonesia menjadi: c. bakal calon
kepala daerah dan wakil kepala daerah”.
(“Political parties recruit Indonesian citizens to
become: c. candidates for regional head and deputy
regional head”)
Then paragraph (2) of article 29 reads:
“rekrutmen sebagaimana yang dimaksud pada ayat
(1) huruf c dilakukan secara demokratis dan terbuka
sesuai dengan AD dan ART serta peraturan
perundang-undangan.”
("Recruitment as referred to in paragraph (1) letter c
is carried out in a democratic and open manner in
Ikhsan, M., Subhilhar, ., Kusmanto, H. and Nasution, I.
Party Elites and Centralized Selection of Regional Head Candidates.
DOI: 10.5220/0011823500003460
In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Social and Political Development (ICOSOP 2022) - Human Security and Agile Government, pages 401-404
ISBN: 978-989-758-618-7; ISSN: 2975-8300
Copyright
c
2023 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. Under CC license (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
401
accordance with the AD and ART and the laws and
regulations.")
In the 2020 Medan mayor election some time ago,
there were dynamics in a number of political parties
in terms of determining who their party would carry
as a candidate for mayor of Medan. PDIP and
Gerindra are two political parties that have 10 seats in
the city parliament, which were thus able to nominate
their own regional head candidate, but both ended up
in a coalition.
PDIP and Gerindra seem to prioritize the order
from the central elite over the aspirations of
grassroots party administrators, this can be seen at
least from the incumbent mayoral candidate Akhyar
Nasution who is a cadre and administrator of the
North Sumatra PDIP who did not receive a
recommendation and was not promoted by his own
party. PDIP then issued a new membership card for
Bobby Nasution (president Jokowi’s son in law) and
accepted Bobby's registration as a candidate for
mayor of Medan, even though the PDIP's originally
scheduled registration time had closed.
This phenomenon caused turmoil in the
management of the North Sumatra and Medan PDIP,
especially at the sub-district level. Akhyar Nasution,
who was a PDIP cadre from the start, has loyalists at
the grassroots level who have been PDIP
administrators for a long time. These lower-level
administrators reject the policy of the PDIP DPP
which prefers Bobby, who is not a cadre, to Akhyar
Nasution, who is incumbent and has a clear career and
regeneration in PDIP (Arfah 2020).
Not only at the management level, PDIP cadres
and longtime loyalists also issued a firm statement
rejecting the DPP's decision to choose Bobby and are
ready to accept sanctions. The firm stance of the PDI-
P cadres is a manifestation of their disappointment
with the unilateral decision of the DPP, which does
not carry cadres from internal parties whose loyalty
and militancy have been tested (Ilham 2020).
This elitist DPP decision was followed by the
DPD (provincial) and DPC (City) administrators. The
elite's interests were clearly more accommodated than
the voices of grassroots administrators and cadres,
this indication can be seen from the removal of sub-
district administrators who did not support the DPP's
decision to nominate Bobby Nasution in Medan
election. Apart from being removed, the four PAC
(sub-district) heads were also recommended to be
fired from membership in PDIP. The four PAC
leaders came from PAC PDIP in the Medan Area,
Medan Perjuangan, Medan Johor, and Medan
Selayang (Molana 2020).
Akhyar Nasution himself after not getting the
ticket from the PDIP then approached the Democratic
Party and the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS). As a
result, the two parties officially endorsed Akhyar
after he decided to leave the PDI-P and join the
Democrats.
2 RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
The method used in this study is a qualitative research
method, which is a method that describes a problem
with an emphasis on depth of data or analysis.
Qualitative research is an investigative process in
which researchers gradually try to understand social
phenomena by differentiating, imitating, comparing,
cataloging and classifying objects of study (Creswell,
2009).
The data obtained were then analyzed using
descriptive-analytical method. With the descriptive
method, attention is focused on phenomena that are
actual at the time the research is being conducted,
which shows the facts about the problem being
studied, as well as accurate and rational interpretation
of data or information.
Researchers in collecting data use several data
collection techniques, one of which is; Library
research, namely by studying and collecting data
through relevant literature and reading sources that
support research. This study uses internet journals
and books that are in accordance with the studies in
this study.
This study takes the research locus on the 2020
mayor elections in Medan, the main focus is on the
process of selecting regional heads of regional heads
in political parties. The researcher will take 2 (two)
parties that carry Bobby Nasution's regional heads,
namely PDIP and Gerindra Party as objects of
research to determine the mechanism and dynamics
of the regional regional head selection process in
these political parties.
3 RESULT & DISCUSSION
3.1 Party Elitism & Inequality Politic
Political parties often choose to nominate candidates
from outside their own cadre, they tend to look for
candidates who have the resources to fund campaigns
– often also who can afford to pay the party for
candidacy and who have strong enough local
recognition and popularity to have a chance of
ICOSOP 2022 - International Conference on Social and Political Development 4
402
winning. The ideological differentiation between
political parties is also unclear, this causes
prospective voters to be unable to distinguish the
'gender' of political parties based on their policy
positions or platforms, voter preferences tend to be
more prominent figures (Aspinall and Mas’Udi 2017;
Muhtadi 2019).
Candidate selection is one of the paths for
implementing the party's internal democracy (Susan
Scarrow in Hanafi 2021). Internal party democracy
according to William P. Cross focuses on the internal
distribution of power within a political party. Hanafi
stated that one of the challenges of recruitment is the
institutionalization of personal and oligarchic
leadership of some political parties in Indonesia. The
consequence is the weak commitment of the elite or
party leaders to build and institutionalize the party's
internal democracy.
Elites are actors who control resources, occupy
key positions and relate through power networks
(Yamokoski and Dubrow, 2008). Thus, the concept
of state-of-the-art elite is more closely related to the
Weberian notion of power, understood as the ability
to carry out one's will, even against the will of others
(Weber, 2005). Power can be achieved through
material and/or symbolic resources. Consequently,
elites can be defined as those who possess these
resources (Reis and Moore, 2005) (López 2013).
Meanwhile, local political elites are those who
occupy political positions in the local sphere. The
existence and role of local political elites cannot be
separated from the influence of changes that occur in
the political system that surrounds them. Changes that
occur in the political system have an influence on the
relationship between the elite and the masses, but also
on the relationship between the elite and the state.
Many studies of elites assume that privileged
positions in key sectors of society political,
economic, military, religious, cultural, and civil –
give one a louder and clearer political voice and, in
some cases, the power to step in to the mass base
when needed. Mills and other elite theorists argue that
the state has been hijacked by elite cabals or, at a
minimum, that policy preferences belong to elites.
Elites play a large role in the political process as both
prime movers and beneficiaries of unequal
democratic political systems. Kahn (2012) concludes
in an article in the Annual Review of Sociology on
elite sociology that, Elites are often engines of
inequality, be it in terms of economic distribution,
political power, or access and control over institutions
(Dubrow 2014).
There is also a dynamic within the internal elite,
where each elite individual competes with each other
to maintain his position and role. Therefore, with
changes in the political system, local political elites
must be able to formulate strategies to be able to
achieve and maintain their positions and roles
(Haryanto 2009).
What happened in the Bobby Nasution case in the
2020 Medan election was a political recruitment
process that ignored the development of the party's
internal democratic institutions. The distribution of
internal power of political parties is unequally
distributed when deciding which candidate to carry in
the pilkada. The PDIP elite who are in the central
management (DPP) clearly have the full right to
decide their attitude regardless of the aspirations of
local cadres who have their own choice, namely the
old PDIP cadre Akhyar Nasution.
In a case study in Latin America, Waisman said
the Latin American political system is run with
privilege, where well-organized elites use their
position to benefit themselves at the expense of those
who are marginalized. Political elites in Latin
America, according to Waisman, are determined to
make their political careers as long and 'wet' as
possible. This desire to gain power and stay on top
can be shaped and strengthened during their ascent.
Joignant et al. found that ascension to the top of the
political elite was more likely if they first gained
experience in lower-level political organizations.
This suggests a closed elite system that operates on
pre-existing privileges and that leads to selective
political boundaries where only a few resource-rich
and organizationally skilled people can enter.
Cases that occurred in the 2020 Medan city mayor
elections, we can clearly enter according to the
Waisman category that occurred in South America
above. Bobby Nasution, who is part of the central
political elite because he is the son-in-law of
president Jokowi, was chosen as a candidate for
mayor of Medan by the same party that brought his
father-in-law as president of Indonesia. Making
Bobby Nasution the mayor of Medan when his father-
in-law was President demonstrates how a closed elite
system operates based on privilege and leads to
selective political boundaries where only a handful of
resource-rich people can enter.
4 CONCLUSIONS
Although there are many descriptive case studies on
the process of candidate recruitment within certain
parties, and the existence of formal party regulatory
documents, relatively little is known about the
structure and dynamics of the process in practice. In
Party Elites and Centralized Selection of Regional Head Candidates
403
the internal research of political parties as
organizations, the nomination process is the
dependent variable that serves to understand the
distribution of power within the party among different
organs and factions.
In most countries, parties have their own internal
processes and regulations in the candidate
recruitment process. But who decides? The following
are the key dimensions of party internal democracy:
I. Degree of Centralization, i.e. the degree to
which nominations are determined primarily by
national party leaders or delegated downwards
to regional, district or local bodies;
II. Breadth of participation, a related but distinct
issue of whether only a few selectors select
candidates or whether many people are involved
in the process, and
III. Scope of decision making, regarding whether
there is a choice of one, few, or many
competitors who want to be nominated.
This research will then be carried out within the
framework of the key dimensions above, with the
help of discussions and debates about party elites and
political inequality, the researcher hopes to capture
the role of elites at each level and how elites work to
preserve power in their hands through a candidate
selection mechanism that seems democratic.
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