ASEANEWS HEADLINE- POLITICS | JAKARTA: Indirect election push sparks democratic concerns

People check a board with candidate information on Nov. 27, 2024, before casting their ballots during the local executive elections to elect governors, mayors and regents in Darul Imarah, on the outskirts of Banda Aceh. (AFP/Chaideer Mahyudin)
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Jakarta is experiencing the country’s worst post-election violence in 20 years. Even President Joko Widodo’s own supporters are questioning his commitment to rooting out corruption and now the president’s biggest challenge may be restoring people’s faith in democracy. So, will these latest protests change the mind of Widodo who won fifty five percent of the vote?

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O pposition is intensifying in response to renewed efforts by government officials and the political elite to scrap direct regional head elections and return to an indirect voting system, with critics warning that such a move would represent a serious regression in Indonesia’s democratic development.

The proposal has gained traction recently amid legislative discussions to revise the country’s elections law, following a Constitutional Court ruling that staggered the timing of national and regional polls.

Several political parties have since used the momentum to push for indirect elections, where regional heads would be appointed by Regional Legislative Councils (DPRD) instead of directly elected by the public.

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However, the Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P), the largest party in the House of Representatives and the only de-facto opposition force, has firmly rejected the idea, arguing that dismantling direct elections would mark a regression in the country’s democratic system.

“It would be truly odd if the people’s right to choose their leaders was taken away and handed over to a small group of elites in the DPRD,” PDI-P executive Deddy Sitorus said on Thursday during a party event in Denpasar, Bali.

“When it comes to electing regional heads […] we firmly believe this must remain the people’s right.”

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Election law expert Titi Anggraini, who also sits on the board of supervisors at the Association for Elections and Democracy (Perludem), echoed the concern, warning that scrapping direct elections would deal a serious blow to efforts to strengthen Indonesian democracy.

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Dio Suhenda and Yerica Lai
The Jakarta Post-PREMIUM
Jakarta/Denpasar
Fri, August 1, 2025

 

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TRIVIA

Indirect election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaAn indirect election or hierarchical voting,[1] is an election in which voters do not choose directly among candidates or parties for an office, but elect people who in turn choose candidates or parties. This electoral system is one of the oldest forms of elections and is used by many countries for heads of state (such as presidents), heads of government (such as prime ministers), and/or upper houses. It is also used for some supranational legislatures. The body that controls the federal executive branch (such as a cabinet) is in many countries elected indirectly by the head of government with exception of the directorial system. Upper houses, especially in federal republics, are often indirectly elected, either by the corresponding lower house or cabinet.

Positions that are indirectly elected may be chosen by a permanent body (such as a parliament) or by a special body convened solely for that purpose (such as an electoral college). An election can be partially indirect, for example in the case of indirect single transferable voting, where only eliminated candidates select other candidates to transfer their vote share to. Similarly, supranational legislatures can be indirectly elected by constituent countries’ legislatures or executive governments.

 

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Heads of state

A head of state is the official leader and representative of a country.[2] The head of state position can vary from ceremonial figurehead with limited power to powerful leader depending on the government structure and historical legacy of the country.[3] For instance, in some cases heads of state inherit the position through a monarchy whereas others are indirectly or directly elected such as presidents.[4] Several examples are included below.

United States

The President of the United States is elected indirectly. In a US presidential election, eligible members of the public vote for the electors of an Electoral College, who have previously pledged publicly to support a particular presidential candidate.[5] When the Electoral College sits, soon after the election, it formally elects the candidate that has won a majority of the members of the Electoral College. Members of the federal cabinet, including the vice president, are in practice nominated by the president, and are thus elected indirectly.[6] The Electoral College is a controversial issue in U.S. politics, especially following presidential elections when voting is polarized geographically in such a way that the electoral college elects a candidate who did not win an absolute majority of the popular vote.[7] The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, if enacted, would effectively replace the indirect election via the Electoral College with a de facto plurality-based direct election.[8]

China

The Constitution of the People’s Republic of China specifies a system of indirect democracy.[9] The National People’s Congress elects the president, also known as the state chairman, who serves as state representative.[10] The power of the presidency is largely ceremonial and has no real power in China’s political system, the vast majority of power stems from the president’s position as General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party and commander-in-chief of the military.[11]

 

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European Union

The president of the European Commission is nominated by the European Council and confirmed or denied by the directly elected European Parliament (see Elections to the European Parliament).[12]

Parliamentary systems

Republics with parliamentary systems usually elect their head of state indirectly (e.g. GermanyItalyEstoniaLatviaMaltaHungaryIndiaIsraelBangladesh).[13] Several parliamentary republics, such as IrelandAustriaCroatiaBulgaria and the Czech Republic, operate using a semi-presidential system with a directly elected president distinct from the prime minister.[14]

Government

A head of government is in charge of the daily business of government and overseeing central government institutions. In presidential systems the president is the head of government and head of state. In parliamentary systems the head of government is usually the leader of the party with the most seats in the legislature.[15] Several examples of heads of government who are chosen through indirect elections are summarized below.

 

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Prime minister

The most prominent position in parliamentary democracies is the prime ministership.[16]

Under the Westminster system, named after and typified by the parliament of the United Kingdom, a prime minister (or first minister, premier, or chief minister) is the person that can command the largest coalition of supporters in parliament. In almost all cases, the prime minister is the leader of a political party (or coalition) that has a majority in the parliament, or the lower house (such as the House of Commons), or in the situation that no one party has a majority then the largest party or a coalition of smaller parties may attempt to form a minority government. The prime minister is thus indirectly elected as political parties elect their own leader through internal democratic process, while the general public choose from amongst the local candidates of the various political parties or independents.[17]

The Westminster model continues to be used in a number of Commonwealth countries including AustraliaCanadaNew ZealandSingapore and the United Kingdom.[18] Additionally many nations colonized by the British Empire inherited the Westminster model following their independence.[19]

In Spain, the Congress of Deputies votes on a motion of confidence of the king’s nominee (customarily the party leader whose party controls the Congress) and the nominee’s political manifesto, an example of an indirect election of the prime minister of Spain.[20]

 

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Federal Chancellor

In Germany, the federal chancellor – the most powerful position on the federal level – is elected indirectly by the Bundestag, which in turn is elected by the population.[21] The federal president, the head of state, proposes candidates for the chancellor’s office. Although this has never happened, the Bundestag may in theory also choose to elect another person into office, which the president has to accept.[22]

Appointment

Some countries have nonpartisan heads of government who are appointed by the president, such as the Prime Minister of Singapore.[23]

Upper houses

Members of the German Bundesrat are appointed (delegated) by the Landtag of the various states.

In France, election to the upper house of Parliament, the Sénat, is indirect. Electors (called “Grands électeurs“) are locally elected representatives.

Members of the Indian Rajya Sabha (upper house of parliament) are largely elected directly by the Vidhan Sabha (legislative assembly) of the various states and Union territories; some are appointed by the president.

Indirect single transferable voting is used to elect some members of the Senate of Pakistan.[24]

 

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Legislatures

China

The National People’s Congress of China is elected by lower level of the system of people’s congress.[25]

Supranational

Some examples of indirectly elected supranational legislatures include: the parliamentary assemblies of the Council of EuropeOSCE and NATO – in all of these cases, voters elect national parliamentarians, who in turn elect some of their own members to the assembly. The same applies to bodies formed by representatives chosen by a national government, e.g. the United Nations General Assembly – assuming the national governments in question are democratically elected in the first place.

 

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Historical

The Control Yuan of China, formerly a parliamentary chamber, was elected by its respective legislatures across the country: five from each province, two from each directly administered municipality, eight from Mongolia (by 1948 only the Inner Mongolian provinces were represented), eight from Tibet and eight from the overseas Chinese communities. As originally envisioned both the President and Vice President of the Control Yuan were to be elected by and from the members like the speaker of many other parliamentary bodies worldwide. The Control Yuan became a sole auditory body in Taiwan in 1993 after democratization.

Members of the United States Senate were elected by the Legislature of the various states until ratification of the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution in 1913. Since that time they have been elected by direct popular vote.

Accountability

Indirect elections can have a lower political accountability and responsiveness compared to direct elections.[26]

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