The 2014 Indonesian General Election and Beyond: Melting “Frozen” Cleavages
Abstract
This study investigates Lipset-Rokkan’s ‘‘freezing hypothesis’’ based on the contemporary Indonesia
cleavages by analyzing the 2014 election together with the previous elections. This study
found the endured cleavages are ethnic and aliran (literally, ‘‘stream’’), which consist of the competing
abangan (nominal Muslim) and santri (devout Muslim) cleavages. Both had been ‘‘frozen,’’ or
existed latantly, during the New Order, but they revived afterwards. However, the ethnic cleavage
arguably has been ‘‘melted’’ faster than the aliran one as the former seems to be more vulnerable to
other political appeals. The aliran, in contrast, is somewhat callous due to its complex basis. This
paper also suggests that, because the strength of any individual cleavage may vary from one region
to another, capturing the empirically existing cleavages better may require going to regional or
district levels instead of being solely reliant on a national-level study. This study underscores that
the cleavages in the form of ethnicity and aliran cannot simply be abandoned in the elections in
Indonesia. It is even suggested that the aliran may be one of the dimensions of the endogeneity of
voters’ religio-political identity.
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