Asia | Succession in Indonesia

The King of Java inflames an Indonesian “democratic emergency”

Jokowi is clinging to power and protesters are angry about it

Indonesia's President Joko Widodo
The man who would be monarch?Photograph: Getty Images
|Singapore

It was the kind of move that Suharto, a strongman who ruled Indonesia with an iron fist from 1967 to 1998, would have admired. Joko Widodo, Indonesia’s president, staged a hostile takeover of the late dictator’s party, Golkar, on August 21st, when its members elected Bahlil Lahadalia, the president’s fixer and Indonesia’s energy minister, as its chair. No one dared run against Mr Bahlil. In a smug victory speech, the new chair warned his charges “not to play around with the King of Java”—a clear reference to Jokowi, as the president is known—adding that it would end badly for them.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Asia section of the print edition under the headline “The King of Java”

From the August 31st 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

The Adani scandal takes the shine off Modi’s electoral success

The tycoon’s indictment clouds the prime minister’s prospects

Priyanka Gandhi addresses a rally standing in front of an image of herself.

Priyanka Gandhi: dynastic scion, and hope of India’s opposition

Poised to enter parliament, she may have bigger ambitions than that 


Kazakhstan, the Ustyurt plateau. Caspian sea;

The Caspian Sea is shrinking rapidly

This has big implications for Russia, which has come to rely on Central Asian ports


Racial tensions boil over in New Zealand

A controversial bill regarding Maori people punctures its relative harmony

Once a free-market pioneer, Sri Lanka takes a leap to the left

A new president with Marxist roots now dominates parliament too