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JP/3/PATRIOT

Abandoned by Golkar, youth affiliate seeks new image

Rais Hidayat
Research and
Development Unit
The Jakarta Post
Jakarta

Several youth organizations were closely linked with the
ruling Golkar party under the New Order regime. They were its
right arm, ready to guard any of its events and to mobilize
support. They gained considerable influence, even if some of it
was borne out of fear or resentment. Its activists gained
economic and political benefits like guaranteed seats in the
legislature. One such organization was the Pancasila Youth
(Pemuda Pancasila) with its well-known leader Yapto Soelistio
Soerjosoemarno, its chairman from 1996 to 2001.

How indeed would the party come clean of its intimidating
image? For one thing its campaigners would have to explain to all
prospective voters what they mean by "maintaining the unitary
state of the republic of Indonesia and Pancasila through
constitutional and extra-constitutional (means)."

Set up on Oct. 28 1959 the organization was initially
affiliated to the Independence Vanguard Party (IPKI) contesting
the 1955 and 1971 elections with poor results. The party, founded
by leading generals AH Nasution, Subroto, and Aziz Saleh in 1954,
secured only four seats in 1955 and did not even gain one seat in
1971.

In 1973 IPKI merged into the Indonesian Democratic Party (PDI)
with other nationalist and Christian parties, but the previous
supporters increasingly identified themselves with Golkar,
including those from Pancasila Youth. The organization started to
totally support Golkar after the 1982 election.

However starting in the late 1990s it felt rather disturbed by
the strong accommodation of the Association of Indonesian Muslim
Intellectuals (ICMI) within the secular, nationalist party.

Up until May 1998 when Soeharto stepped down, the organization
still joined other youth organizations closely tied to Golkar to
defend the president, who also led Golkar's board. They were in
direct confrontation with masses of students who wanted to bring
Soeharto down.

Eventually though, Pancasila Youth seemed to begin to feel
unhappy with Golkar -- who, as the "New Golkar Party", needed to
widen its support base at the cost of old loyalists. "Golkar
Baru" no longer needed association with its former loyalists, who
were associated closely with the New Order's style of stepping
over others.

Pancasila Youth must have felt it had been sacrificed -- it
had contributed millions of voters, it claims, for Golkar who won
all four general elections. In 1999 the organization declared
itself independent of Golkar, however hard it would be to wash
off the association in the eyes of the public.

This was followed by the declaration of the Pancasila Patriots
Party on June 1, 2001, at Proclamation Monument, Jakarta. Founder
Yapto was then elected a year later as president of the new
party.

The declaration also meant it was independent from its
previous parent party IPKI, a revival of the 1971 party, which in
1999 secured only one seat in the legislature.

The party's secretary-general Sophar Maru Hutagalung said that
now only a few Golkar legislative candidates were from the
organization, while ahead of elections the organization usually
contributed some 500 cadres.

Hutagalung says the reason for setting up the party is not
mere disappointment with Golkar. The founders see that
"separatism, federalism, and fundamentalism threaten the very
existence of the country," and that the state ideology Pancasila
is the only glue binding the nation together.

The party is optimistic about gaining 3 percent of the House
seats, confident that most of its six million members will vote
for it. Some of its executives, however, such as Yoris Raweyai
are still with Golkar.

What about outside supporters? That would depend on how fast,
in the shortest time possible, the party can free the youth
organizations' image as one of a group of thugs.

The image is still there, says Hutagalung, although the party
now accommodates businessmen and intellectuals, and is more
focused on building cooperatives in the regions.

Yapto is also a former deputy chairman of the Young Generation
for Indonesian Renewal (AMPI) for 1984-1989 period and deputy
chairman for the Communication Forum of Children of Indonesian
Veterans (FKPPI) for the 1991-1995 period. Both were affiliated
to Golkar.

But whether and to what extent these two organizations will
provide support for Golkar is not clear. There are other parties
led by former Golkar and military men that will compete for their
support, including the Justice and Unity Party led by Gen.(ret)
Edy Sudrajat and the Concern for the Nation Functional Party
(PKPB) led by Gen.(ret) Hartono.

Some regions are considered potential strongholds, namely
Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam, North Sumatra, Lampung, South Sumatra,
Central Sulawesi, West Nusa Tenggara and East Nusa Tenggara.

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