Channelnewsasia.com
Friday, December 05, 2008
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
Mumbai Attacks
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 
 

Indonesian parties turn to celebrities as election looms
Posted: 05 September 2008 1218 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

JAKARTA: With his sculpted abdominals proudly displayed on his Facebook profile, male model Adrian Maulana cuts a very different figure to the ex-generals and dynastic heirs who dominate Indonesian politics.

He is at the forefront of a new push by Indonesian parties to field celebrities and other tabloid favourites - collectively known as "artis" - as candidates in next year's legislative election.

Sitting with his shirt on in a Japanese restaurant, the 30-year-old Maulana admitted he is "still learning" about politics even though he has already been accepted as a candidate by the liberal National Mandate Party (PAN).

The former engineering student, who was part of the 1998 protests that overthrew Suharto is visibly uncomfortable, his voice quavering, when tackling policy questions.

However, the sometime soap opera and film star said "artis" are quick learners and had to memorise scripts at short notice. They also have the common touch, he said.

"We celebrities, we are used to talking to the poor people, we are used to taking pictures with them. So we are more sensitive. We know what they want, we know what they need," he said.

The celebrity candidates are an attempt by parties to reconnect with a public that has become disillusioned with 10 years of democracy, persistent poverty and a steady stream of high-level graft scandals, analysts said.

Sitting lawmaker Nurul Arifin, herself a former actress, said the explosion of celebrity candidates for the April polls exposes how poorly parties have connected with Indonesian voters.

Parties remain the vehicles of big personalities with money. Any candidate who wants to break into politics needs stacks of cash to pay party members and promote themselves through advertising.

Celebrities, already well recognised by Indonesia's masses, get to bypass - or at least get a discount on - this process "because they already have social capital," Arifin said.

"I'm worried about the substance of these artis. Do they know the substance of politics? Do they know what it means to be a politician?" she asked.

The party most enthusiastically recruiting celebrities, Maulana's PAN, is working hard to make sure its famous candidates don't become embarrassments.

PAN has appointed its own "head of cinema and infotainment" to look after its 15 celebrities and has hired a private political consultancy to run special training sessions.

The star candidates gather at least weekly at a conference table in front of a bank of plasma screens for workshops on party strategy, current issues and political basics.

Political scientist Bima Arya Sugiyarto, who has been hired to help in the training, said some of his charges still had a lot of work to do before they could enter parliament.

"For some people they do have an adequate knowledge of politics, for others they really are beginners," Sugiarto said.

The push for celebrities by parties across the spectrum is an acknowledgement that politicians are trying to combat a dirty reputation for brown-paper-bag politics, he said.

"Massive publicity for corruption scandals by party politicians has really damaged the image of party politics," he said.

"They hope that by recruiting celebrities and public figures, the public will still vote for the parties' candidates."

PAN's celebrity coordinator, Amazon Dalimunthe, said the party valued the relatively clean image of celebrities enough to risk the ire of rank-and-file party members passed over for candidacy.

"Of course there's jealousy (from party cadres). They protested, but the party leadership is looking at it from a wider perspective," Dalimunthe said.

Celebrities have been embraced with fervour across much of Indonesia's fractious political spectrum.

The parties of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and his main rival Megawati Sukarnoputri have recruited TV and film stars, joining tickets that include one of ex-general Yudhoyono's sons and one of Megawati's daughters.

Former special forces chief, alleged human rights violator and Suharto son-in-law Prabowo Subianto has also tapped a sweet-faced soap star to run with his nationalist Gerindra Party.

Even the Islamic United Development Party has a popular singer of "dangdut," an Arabic and Indian-infused pop music associated in equal parts with sleazy dens and the country's rural heartland.

- AFP/yb

 

 



Other asiapacific News
Six dead in Pakistan market blast
Tourists flood out of Thailand but turmoil remains
Malaysia's government faces critical by-election test
India, Russia sign nuclear energy, space deals
Major alert at Delhi airport, police say situation "normal"
Taiwan ex-leader denies son laundered money in Japan
Rice says Pakistan pledges to investigate Mumbai attacks
Russia's Medvedev set to sign nuclear deal in India
Doctor visits Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi
Knife-wielding Indonesian pirates rob vessel off Malaysia's Tioman island
US, NKorea envoys in Singapore for talks
Indian opposition demands action against Pakistan
Dozens dead or missing in Philippines floods
Polluted Indonesian river to get major cleanup, says ADB
Philippines says leftist rebels spurned 2009 peace treaty
Nine killed in southern Thailand violence
Japanese still splurging on New Year gifts
Indonesia conducts study on yoga before issuing fatwa
Japanese climber dies hours before rescue on NZealand mountain

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions