Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-wq484 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T17:54:54.635Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

STUCK IN PLACE? NORMALIZATION AND THE CHANGING VOTER PROFILE OF INDONESIA'S ISLAMIST PROSPEROUS JUSTICE PARTY

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 October 2021

Abstract

Using the case of the Indonesian Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), I seek to measure the actual impact of Islamist parties’ moderation on their electoral performances and voter bases. Statistical analyses find that although PKS has experienced an influx of diverse voters since the early 2000s, the influx was offset by a gradual withdrawal of educated Islamist voters, who had been loyal to the party since its establishment. I further claim that this change in PKS's voter profile was attributable not to moderation per se but to normalization, manifesting in an adaptation of the party elites’ behaviors to the existing patterns in Indonesian politics. The party's recent policy shift with a conservative tone was insufficient to regain votes from its original supporters, who already saw PKS as a run-of-the-mill party. PKS's case implies that it is necessary for Islamist parties to maintain their distinctiveness as an alternative voice in the party system.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the East Asia Institute

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Allen, Nathan W. 2015. “Clientelism and the Personal Vote in Indonesia.” Electoral Studies 37: 7385.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ananta, Aris, Arifin, Evi Nurvidya, and Suryadinata, Leo. 2004. Indonesian Electoral Behavior: A Statistical Perspective. Singapore: ISEAS.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Arifianto, Alexander R. 2018. “Islamic Campus Preaching Organizations in Indonesia: Promoters of Moderation or Radicalism?” Asian Security 15 (3): 323342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aspinall, Edward. 2005. “Elections and the Normalization of Politics in Indonesia.” South East Asia Research 13 (2): 117156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baswedan, Anies Rasyid. 2004. “Political Islam in Indonesia: Present and Future Trajectory.” Asian Survey 44 (5): 669690.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berenschot, Ward, and Aspinall, Edward. 2020. “How Clientelism Varies: Comparing Patronage Democracies.” Democratization 27 (1): 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berland, Allison. 2017. “When Do Religious Parties Moderate?: Religious Party Moderation in Indonesia, Turkey, and India.” SAIS Review of International Affairs 37 (1S): 131143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boubekeur, Amel. 2016. “Islamists, Secularists and Old Regime Elites in Tunisia: Bargained Competition.” Mediterranean Politics 21 (1): 107127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Gustav. 2019. “Conforming Choices: Peer Influence, Adoption, and Interpretation of the Islamic Headscarf in Indonesia.” Sociology of Religion 80 (3): 372398.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buehler, Michael. 2012. “Revisiting the Inclusion-Moderation Thesis in the Context of Decentralized Institutions: The Behavior of Indonesia's Prosperous Justice Party in National and Local Politics.” Party Politics 19 (2): 210229.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buehler, Michael. 2016. The Politics of Shari'a Law: Islamist Activists and the State in Democratizing Indonesia. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Charta Politika Indonesia. 2018. Rilis Survei Pilpres & Pileg 2019 Provinsi Jawa Tengah [Release of the 2019 Presidenital and Legislative Election Surveys]. Charta Politika Indonesia.Google Scholar
Charta Politika Indonesia. 2019. Pileg 2019: Pemilu Yang Terlupakan? [The 2019 Legislative Election: Forgotten Election?]. Charta Politika Indonesia.Google Scholar
Choi, Jungug. 2017. “The Influence of Poverty on the Politicization of Islam in Indonesia.” Asian Survey 57 (2): 229248.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collins, Elizabeth Fuller. 2003. “‘Islam is the Solution’: Dakwah and Democracy in Indonesia.” Kutlur 3 (1): 151181.Google Scholar
Daadaoui, Mohamed. 2017. “Of Monarchs and Islamists: The ‘Refo-Lutionary’ Promise of the PJD Islamists and Regime Control in Morocco.” Middle East Critique 26 (4): 355371.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davidson, Jamie S. 2009. “Dilemmas of Democratic Consolidation in Indonesia.” Pacific Review 22 (3): 293310.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Driessen, Michael D. 2012. “Public Religion, Democracy, and Islam: Examining the Moderation Thesis in Algeria.” Comparative Politics 44 (2): 171189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fealy, Greg. 2011. “Indonesian Politics in 2011: Democratic Regression and Yudhoyono's Regal Incumbency.” Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 47 (3): 333353.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fealy, Greg, and Platzdasch, Bernhard. 2005. “The Masyumi Legacy: Between Islamist Idealism and Political Exigency.” Studia Islamika 12 (1): 73101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fionna, Ulla, and Tomsa, Dirk. 2020. “Changing Patterns of Factionalism in Indonesia: From Principle to Patronage.” Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 39 (1): 3958.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fossati, Diego. 2019. “The Resurgence of Ideology in Indonesia: Political Islam, Aliran and Political Behaviour.” Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs 38 (2): 119148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fossati, Diego, Aspinall, Edward, Muhtadi, Burhanuddin, and Warburton, Eve. 2020. “Ideological Representation in Clientelistic Democracies: The Indonesian Case.” Electoral Studies 63: 112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fuad, Ai Fatimah Nur. 2020. “Da'wa and Politics: Lived Experiences of the Female Islamists in Indonesia.” Contemporary Islam 14: 1947.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
García-Rivero, Carlos, and Kotzé, Hennie. 2007. “Electoral Support for Islamic Parties in the Middle East and North Africa.” Party Politics 13 (5): 611636.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geertz, Clifford. 1960. The Religion of Java. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Hadiz, Vedi R. 2014. “A New Islamic Populism and the Contradictions of Development.” Journal of Contemporary Asia 44 (1): 125143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hadiz, Vedi R, and Robison, Richard. 2013. “The Political Economy of Oligarchy and the Reorganization of Power in Indonesia.” Indonesia 96: 3557.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hairgrove, Frank, and Mcleod, Douglas M.. 2008. “Circles Drawing toward High Risk Activism: The Use of Usroh and Halaqa in Islamist Radical Movements.” Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 31 (5): 399411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamayotsu, Kikue. 2011. “The Political Rise of the Prosperous Justice Party in Post-Authoritarian Indonesia.” Asian Survey 51 (5): 971992.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hasan, Noorhaidi. 2006. Laskar Jihad: Islam, Militancy, and the Quest for Identity in Post-New Order Indonesia. Ithaca: Cornell Southeast Asia Program.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hasan, Noorhaidi. 2013. The Making of Public Islam: Piety, Democracy and Youth in Indonesian Politics. Yogyakarta: SUKA-Press.Google Scholar
Hidayat, Syahrul. 2012. Managing Moderation: The AKP in Turkey and the PKS in Indonesia. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Exeter.Google Scholar
Hilmy, Masdar. 2010. Islamism and Democracy in Indonesia: Piety and Pragmatism. Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hwang, Julie Chernov. 2014. “Patterns of Normalization: Islamist Parties in Indonesia.” In Islamist Parties and Political Normalization in the Muslim World, edited by Mecham, Quinn and Hwang, Julie Chernov, 5883. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Hwang, Julie Chernov, and Mecham, Quinn. 2010. “Institutional Incentives and the Electoral Success of Islamist Parties: Explaining the Divergent Trajectories of the PKS in Indonesia and the AKP in Turkey.” In Association for Asian Studies Annual Meeting, 140. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Kalyvas, Stathis N. 1996. The Rise of Christian Democracy in Europe. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kramer, Elisabeth. 2014. “A Fall from Grace? ‘Beef-Gate’ and the Case of Indonesia's Prosperous Justice Party.” Asian Politics & Policy 6 (4): 555576.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kurzman, Charles, and Naqvi, Ijlal. 2010. “Do Muslims Vote Islamic?” Journal of Democracy 21 (2): 5063.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Indonesia, Lembaga Survei. 2008. Kekuatan Elektoral Partai-Partai Islam Menjelang Pemilu 2009 [Electoral Strength of Islamic Parties in the Upcoming 2009 Election]. Jakarta: Lembaga Survei Indonesia.Google Scholar
Liddle, R. William, and Mujani, Saiful. 2005. “Indonesia in 2004: The Rise of Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.” Asian Survey 45 (1): 119126.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lucardie, Paul. 2000. “Prophets, Purifiers and Prolocutors: Toward a Theory on the Emergence of New Parties.” Party Politics 6 (2): 175185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Machmudi, Yon. 2006. “Islamising Indonesia: The Rise of Jemaah Tarbiyah and the Prosperous Jusitice Party (PKS).” Ph.D. Thesis, The Australian National University.Google Scholar
McCarthy, Rory. 2018. “When Islamists Lose: The Politicization of Tunisia's Ennahda Movement.” Middle East Journal 72 (3): 365384.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mecham, Quinn, and Hwang, Julie Chernov, eds. 2014. Islamist Parties and Political Normalization in the Muslim World. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mietzner, Marcus. 2007. “Party Financing in Post-Soeharto Indonesia: Between State Subsidies and Political Corruption.” Contemporary Southeast Asia 29 (2): 238263.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mietzner, Marcus. 2008. “Comparing Indonesia's Party Systems of the 1950s and the Post-Suharto Era: From Centrifugal to Centripetal Inter-Party Competition.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 39 (3): 431453.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mietzner, Marcus, and Muhtadi, Burhanuddin. 2018. “Explaining the 2016 Islamist Mobilisation in Indonesia: Religious Intolerance, Militant Groups and the Politics of Accommodation.” Asian Studies Review 42 (3): 119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mozaffari, Mehdi. 2007. “What Is Islamism? History and Definition of a Concept.” Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions 8 (1): 1733.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mujani, Saiful, and Liddle, R. William. 2009. “Muslim Indonesia's Secular Democracy.” Asian Survey 49 (4): 575590.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nastiti, Aulia, and Ratri, Sari. 2018. “Emotive Politics: Islamic Organizations and Religious Mobilization in Indonesia.” Contemporary Southeast Asia 40 (2): 196221.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Noor, Firman. 2016. “Leadership and Ideological Bond: PPP and Internal Fragmentation in Indonesia.” Studia Islamika 23 (1): 61104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pepinsky, Thomas B., Liddle, R. William, and Mujani, Saiful. 2018. Piety and Public Opinion: Understanding Indonesian Islam. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Permata, Ahmad-Norma. 2008. Islamist Party and Democratic Participation: Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) in Indonesia 1998–2006. Ph.D. Thesis, Westfälischen Wilhelms-Universität.Google Scholar
Priamarizki, Adhi, and Dinarto, Dedi. 2019. “Capturing Anti-Jokowi Sentiment and Islamic Conservative Masses.” RSIS Working Paper No. 324.Google Scholar
Przeworski, Adam. 1985. Capitalism and Social Democracy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rahmat, M. Imdadun. 2008. Ideologi Politik PKS: Dari Masjid Kampus Ke Gedung Parlemen. Yogyakarta: PT LKiS Pelangi Aksara.Google Scholar
Sánchez-Cuenca, Ignacio. 2004. “Party Moderation and Politicians’ Ideological Rigidity.” Party Politics 10 (3): 325342.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schofield, Norman. 2003. “Valence Competition in the Spatial Stochastic Model.” Journal of Theoretical Politics 15 (4): 371383.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwedler, Jillian. 2006. Faith in Moderation: Islamist Parties in Jordan and Yemen. New York: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwedler, Jillian. 2011. “Can Islamists Become Moderates?: Rethinking the Inclusion-Moderation Hypothesis.” World Politics 63 (2): 347376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Slater, Dan, and Simmons, Erica. 2013. “Coping by Colluding: Political Uncertainty and Promiscuous Powersharing in Indonesia and Bolivia.” Comparative Political Studies 46 (11): 13661393.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Somer, Murat. 2014. “Moderation of Religious and Secular Politics, a Country's ‘Centre’ and Democratization.” Democratization 21 (2): 244267.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tanuwidjaja, Sunny. 2012. “PKS in Post-Reformasi Indonesia: Catching the Catch-All and Moderation Wave.” South East Asia Research 20 (4): 533549.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tavits, Margit. 2008. “Party Systems in the Making: The Emergence and Success of New Parties in New Democracies.” British Journal of Political Science 38 (1): 113133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taydas, Zeynep, Akbaba, Yasemin, and Morrison, Minion K. C.. 2012. “Did Secularism Fail? The Rise of Religion in Turkish Politics.” Politics and Religion 5 (3): 528554.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tezcur, Gunes Murat. 2010. “The Moderation Theory Revisited: The Case of Islamic Political Actors.” Party Politics 16 (1): 6988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thachil, Tariq. 2011. “Embedded Mobilization: Nonstate Service Provision as Electoral Strategy in India.” World Politics 63 (3): 434469.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toka, Gabor. 1998. “Party Appeals and Voter Loyalty in New Democracies.” Political Studies 46: 589610.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tomsa, Dirk. 2012. “Moderating Islamism in Indonesia: Tracing Patterns of Party Change in the Prosperous Justice Party.” Political Research Quarterly 55 (3): 486498.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Umam, Ahmad Khoirul, Whitehouse, Gillian, Head, Brian, and Khan, Mohammed Adil. 2020. “Addressing Corruption in Post-Soeharto Indonesia: The Role of the Corruption Eradication Commission.” Journal of Contemporary Asia 50 (1): 125143.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Bruinessen, Martin. 2002. “Genealogies of Islamic Radicalism in Post-Suharto Indonesia.” South East Asia Research 10 (2): 117154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wahid, Nur. 2019. “Jejak Dakwah Partai Keadilan Sejahtera (PKS) Memasuki Muhammadiyah: Mencermati Kasus Di Yogyakarta Sebagai Fenomena Politik Dakwah.” Jurnal Sosiologi Agama 13 (2): 179196.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whitten, Guy D, and Palmer, Harvey D. 1996. “Heightening Comparativists’ Concern for Model Choice: Voting Behavior in Great Britain and the Netherlands.” American Journal of Political Science 40 (1): 231260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wickham, Carrie Rosefsky. 2004. “The Path to Moderation: Strategy and Learning in the Formation of Egypt's Wasat Party.” Comparative Politics 36 (2): 205228.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodward, Mark, Amin, Ali, Rohmaniyah, Inayah, and Lundry, Chris. 2013. “Getting Culture: A New Path for Indonesia's Islamist Justice and Prosperity Party?” Contemporary Islam 7 (2): 173189.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Park supplementary material

Park supplementary material

Download Park supplementary material(File)
File 28.4 KB