Politics
Indonesia’s Widodo backs son’s party for 2029 election with new political tour
Key Points
Indonesia’s Widodo backs son’s party for 2029 election with new political tour The ex-president wants to boost the appeal of the Indonesian Solidarity Party and signal his continuous relevance, analysts say Widodo, popularly known as Jokowi, kicked off the tour in Lampung on Friday, using the visit to appear alongside Indonesian Solidarity Party (PSI) officials and accept a local royal title, signalling that he remains a force in Indonesian politics after leaving office. Dressed in the...
Indonesia’s Widodo backs son’s party for 2029 election with new political tour
The ex-president wants to boost the appeal of the Indonesian Solidarity Party and signal his continuous relevance, analysts say
Widodo, popularly known as Jokowi, kicked off the tour in Lampung on Friday, using the visit to appear alongside Indonesian Solidarity Party (PSI) officials and accept a local royal title, signalling that he remains a force in Indonesian politics after leaving office.
Dressed in the colours of the PSI – a youth-oriented party founded in 2014 and now chaired by his younger son, Kaesang Pangarep – Widodo was in Lampung to attend the party’s local congress.
Unofficially, he was there to throw his weight behind PSI and keep himself politically relevant, according to analysts.
“Jokowi clearly has concluded that it is time to develop PSI into a credible political force,” said Marcus Mietzner, an Indonesia specialist at the Australian National University and author of the recently released biography of the former president, Ruling Indonesia: Jokowi’s Presidency in an Age of Democratic Crisis and Great Power Competition.
When Widodo left office in October 2024, he had an approval rating of 75 per cent in an Indikator Politik Indonesia survey released that month.
PSI has sought to cast itself as a fresh, progressive alternative to Indonesia’s older political parties but has struggled to convert that image into broad electoral support.