Indonesian Leader Plans Powerful "Kitchen Cabinet" to Bolster Reforms
File photo of Indonesian President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo.(Reuters)
Indonesia's new
president, Joko Widodo, aims to tighten his control over a potentially
unruly cabinet with the introduction next month of a "kitchen cabinet"
of trusted aides to help him push through reforms in Southeast Asia's
biggest economy.
Widodo, who won an election on promises to clean
up corruption seen as deeply entrenched in political and commercial
life, will give the four-member team extensive powers including
designing key policies and setting targets for ministries.
The
move follows Widodo's potentially unpopular decision on Monday to impose
fuel price hikes to balance the budget, and is a further sign he wants
to stamp his authority on a country whose economy is growing at its
slowest pace in five years.
"The presidential office will be a
channel for managing the cabinet," Andi Widjajanto, cabinet secretary
and one of the members of the so-called presidential office told Reuters
in a rare interview.
"It will be impossible in this cabinet for
ministers and ministries to just do their own thing," Widjajanto said.
"Many of (Widodo's) programmes are interlinked, so coordination will be
key."
He added that Widodo got the idea after meeting former British Prime Minister Tony Blair in July.
When in power, Blair alienated some ministers who felt that advisers
were making important decisions instead of the cabinet. Political
analysts said such resentment, and resistance, was likely to complicate
Widodo's task in Indonesia.
"Only in some cases will this office
be able to elicit cooperation, because many ministers are likely to be
obstructionist," said political analyst Kevin O'Rourke.
A-Team
The "kitchen cabinet" is not without precedent in Indonesia.
Widodo's
predecessor, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, set up a unit designed to
evaluate ministers' performance, but its impact was limited by political
opposition and a series of high-profile corruption scandals that
claimed three ministers in Yudhoyono's second term.
But this time it's different, said Widjajanto, who is preparing the legal framework that will empower the team.
"Previously
it used to be like a schoolteacher handing out report cards, and that
created tension among the ministers," he said. "We will no longer
evaluate ministers but rather their projects."
The team is already flexing its muscles.
On
recommendations from the new team, the energy ministry this month fired
an underperforming senior official and appointed a corruption activist
to head the oil and gas regulator. Industry members welcomed moves to
clean up the ministry that has long been plagued by graft.
The
team, which will meet more often with the president than the rest of the
cabinet, will be led by a chief of staff due to be appointed before the
end of January 2015, and will be fully operational by February.
Other
members include State Secretary Pratikno, who studied with Widodo, and
National Development Planning Chief Andrinof Chaniago. Both have been
close to him since before he bid for the presidency this year.
Widjajanto,
a defence and foreign affairs expert, has been a trusted adviser
through Widodo's presidential campaign and is close to the chief of his
backing party, Megawati Sukarnoputri.
The combination of
academics and close advisers may offset some concerns that Widodo, a
newcomer on the national political scene, would be undercut by political
forces in his cabinet.
Widodo was last month forced to include
more political appointees in his cabinet than originally planned to
appease the parties in his coalition.
So far, ministers have been public in their support.
"This
government has no ministerial programmes - it's all the president's
programme, all the president's decision," Coordinating Minister for
Maritime Affairs Indroyono Soesilo told Reuters in an interview - a
sentiment echoed by other ministers.
"We just try to implement what is decided by the president."
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