Constitutional Dialogue in the Indonesia Election Law: Tension
between the Indonesian Constitutional Court and the Legislature
Radian Salman, and Rosa Ristawati
1
Faculty of Law, Universitas Airlangga, Indonesia
Keywords: Election, Judicial Review, Constitutional Court, Constitutional Dialogue.
Abstract: This paper elaborates the Indonesian Constitutional Court’s competences on specific issue of judicial review
on the Election Law and dispute settlement of election in Indonesia. It is addressed to examine relationship
between the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Indonesia and the Legislative branch on the issue of the
Election Law. The Indonesian Constitution (the Amendment) determines two important election issues, first
is the type of elections, namely the legislative election and the presidential election. Other issues is the
institutional arrangements of election and the principles of electoral administration. The Constitution gives
the legislature the power to make election law regulating the election agencies, the election systems, the
election processes and dispute settlement of the election results. With regard to the democracy, election Law
is the authority of the election agencies. However, the power to make election Law has to be check by the
Court. This paper indicates that the Indonesian Constitutional Court is an active-progressive court in dealing
with Election Law. Therefore, the Court tends to be very decisive in its decisions. While handing down strong
decisions to uphold important constitutional principles could bring great benefits to citizens, the Court is eager
to strengthen support for democracy. On the other hand, the role of the Court on special issue of judicial
review tends to encroach on the territory of the Legislative. This paper end up with the proposal of a new
approach for Indonesian Constitutional Court on the issue of Election Law. It is argued that the Court has to
prevent the characters as an “activist”, “decisive” and “reactive”. The Court has to conduct constitutional
dialogue with the Legislature specifically on the constitutional meaning in term of election.
1 INTRODUCTION
The Indonesian Constitution (the Amendment)
implies three aspects of general election, namely the
type of elections, the general election organizer, and
dispute settlement of general election. On the type of
elections, Article 22 E Section (2) stipulates that the
general election is for electing the House of
Representative member, Regional Representative
Council member, the president and the vice
president, and the House of Representative at local
level. On the head of local government, Article 18
Section (4) clarifies that the Governor, Regent, Mayor
is democratically elected. On the general election
organizer, the Indonesian Constitution confirmed that
the general election is organized by a general election
commision. Furthermore, with regards to the dispute
settlement of general election, Article 24 Section (1)
confirmed that one of the competences of the
Indonesian Constitutional Court is dispute settlement
of the general election result. To this extent, issues on
election law, namely on the general election system,
the general election procedures, and the dispute
settlement on the general election process are issues
which is delegated and futher regulated on Law. It has
the meaning that the law maker has the competences
to decide the design of general election system,
electoral proccess and dispute settlement regarding to
the process or procedural of the general election. In
this context, the law maker has broad power to decide
the election law in Indonesia.
On the other hands, the law making power has to
be balance by the judicial power, specifically the
Constitutional Court in term of judicial review on
Law including the Law on general election and other
laws relevance to the institutional arrangement as
well as the Law relevance to the electoral process.
Judicial review has its roots on the principle of
constitutional supremacy and constitutionalism.
From the constitutional supremacy perspective, any
Law under the Constitution shall not be contradictory
to the Constitution. Therefore, there should be a
156
Salman, R. and Ristawati, R.
Constitutional Dialogue in the Indonesia Election Law: Tension between the Indonesian Constitutional Court and the Legislature.
DOI: 10.5220/0010052701560162
In Proceedings of the International Law Conference (iN-LAC 2018) - Law, Technology and the Imperative of Change in the 21st Century, pages 156-162
ISBN: 978-989-758-482-4
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
mechanism to review the constitutionality of a law
(the constitutionality of legislation). In
constitutionalism perspective, the limitation of power
is imposed. The limitation means that the absence of
control mechanism on the legislature tends to abuse
of power. The situation could contribute the
possibility of law making in contrary to the norms of
the Constitution (Marzuki, 2010). On the other issues,
the constitutionalism also means the recognitions of
the human rights which have consequences for the
enforcement of those rights by an independent
judiciary, including the protection from existence of
Laws that could harm human rights. Although
judicial review stands on the principle of
constitutional supremacy and constitutionalism, in a
constitutional democracy state, the judicial review
always raises normative question of two things;
namely institutional legitimacy and how these
institutions should be run. Furthermore, in the context
of constitutional democracy, the judicial review has
placed the Constitutional Court as a superior
institution in control relations of the branches of
legislative and executive power. At the national
level, views and concerns arise as a response to some
of the Indonesian Constitutional Court decisions in
judicial review cases on electoral law such as:
Decision No. 22-24/PUU-VI/2008 on the issue of
majority vote in Electoral Constituencies
(Proportional Representation List). Decision No.
102/PUU-VII/2009: Decision contains norm-making
(directive) as in popular case of "the used of ID cards
in the Presidential Election". In fact that the context
of the constitutional court competence on the dispute
settlement on the general election result encourages
the Constitutional Court to act beyond its
competences by deciding the disqualification of one
of the head of local government candidate as it was
decided on the Courrt Decision No. 45/PHPU.D-
VIII/2010. On the dispute settlement of the election
result, the Constitutional Court decides the final result
of the candidates votes as on such case, the
Constitutional Court decides to disqualify the
candidate.
Such decisions generates fundamental problems
concerning on the proper role of judiciary in the
context of the framework of the institutional
relationship within the constitutional law system, in
accordance to the principle of separation of powers,
particularly the authority of the Court in conducting a
proportional judicial review in democracy. The
strengthening of the judiciary branch brings
consequences to the development of the role of
judicial power to conduct further justice that
overstepping powers and authorities, which has been
the political domain of the executive power and
legislative power (Koopmans, 2003). To response
such phenomenon, the German law Journal (2007) ,
in particular publishes a controversial provocative
issues, namely the coup on the courtroom (coup de'tat
in the courtroom), with the main article from Alec
Stone Sweet, describing the phenomenon of
widespread and more powerful judiciary. Meanwhile,
Hirschl (2004) describes such phenomon as
"juristochracy," and Schepelle calls it as a
'courtocracy' where in different countries, the
constitutional reform has transformed the power of
the representative bodies to the judicial institution by
the recognition of human rights in the Constitution
and the mechanism of judicial review. The
transformation in this case, has the meaning that the
important public policies which originally was in the
hands of the elected-agencies and made on the basis
of consensus or majority decision was to be switched
to the judiciary (Bugarij, 2001; Bell, 1983). Such
transformation was also shifting the concept of
democracy, from the 'majority rule' to the 'real-
democracy', namely, the constitutional democracy as
a shift of the "democracy governed predominantly by
the principle of parliamentary sovereignty" (Hirschl,
2004).
For such purpose, this article analyse the
institutional relation between the Constitutional
Court and the Law Maker and its implication to the
development of the election law in Indonesia. This
article also offers constitutional dialogue method on
the development of the election law.
2 JUDICIAL REVIEW OF
LEGISLATION ON ELECTION
LAW
The Judicial review by the Constitutional court which
refers to the Constitution is a constitutional
adjudication activity. The constitutional adjudication
in principle is how the court could work on the
Constitution. In different words, the adjudication is
on how the justice decides or has to decide cases on
the constitutional adjudication. In this context is the
issue of theory of judging. As the interpretation is
about an inherent activity on the judicial review, the
basic question on such constitutional interpretation is
that how the Constitution has to be interpreted. In
other words, the judicial review is not a matter of
assessing whether or not chapters, articles, or sections
in the Law are in accordance to the Constitution. The
judicial review is even more about implemented the
Constitutional Dialogue in the Indonesia Election Law: Tension between the Indonesian Constitutional Court and the Legislature
157
constitutional norms once the Justice decides the
meaning of constitutional norm. Threfore, the judicial
review has dimentions of interpretation on reviewed
Law, which is in practice known as statutory
interpretation, and the constitutional interpretation as
tool to review the Law. On the later dimension, the
judicial review is not only giving interpretation of the
constitutional text, but also how the constitutional
interpretation is implemented on the reviewed Law.
To this extent, the judicial review against the Law is
very often on the area of both activities of
interpretation and construction (Barnett, 2011).
On the second activity, it indicates that the
Constitution has always to be interpreted. There are
some reasons on this point. First, because the
Constitution has the characters of lasting, inclusive,
principled, and fundamental (Pitkin, 1987), therefore
the substance in the Constitution is on the basic aspect
and fundamental principles. The consequences of the
basic and fundamental principles in the Constitution
is that it needs further regulations which has to be
available because of the Constitution say or because
of the urgency of regulation which delegates to the
Law as inferior to the Constitution. On this point, the
Constitution has to be interpreted to make sure that
the Law as delegated is not contradictive to the
Constitution. Secondly, the used of language on the
Constitution has the characters of open texture.
Therefore, the meaning is often not single in term of
interpretation or construction. For example on the
general election context on the Indonesian
Constitution has the term “ democratically elected”,
“direct, general, and free, secret, honest and equal” as
principle of election. Interpretation of such words or
phrase or sentences on the Constitution depends on
the subject who do interpretation as well as the
approach which they may use. Textually, such kind
things would not be interpreted when it has no
conflict. On the constitutional adjudication, Justice
Hughes states that ‘a constitution is without meaning
until the judges pour meaning into its provisions’.
(Motala & Cyril Ramaphosa, 2003)
.
Third, the
Constitution making depends on the moment and
specific context. Consequently, the interpretation of
the Constitution is not the same as when it was made
and when it is developed. If the interpretation of the
Constitution has fix meaning, it needs to be
contructed once it is implemented in the judicial
review. Such third argument delivered interpretation
into two perspectives, namely orginalism dan non-
originalism.
In the context of election Law, regularly, every 4
or 5 years, the election Law could be changed. After
the first Amendment of the Indonesian Constitution
on 1999, the election law has been changed from
1999, 2008, 2013 dan 2018. From all changes there
are two significant aspects in term of institutional
power. First, the frequency of periodic changes is not
a matter of a sign that regular elections are started but
the law maker, the DPR is very powerful on
determine the substances of election law in term of
system, mechanism, and dispute settlement. Second,
after the establishement of the Constitutional Court,
the Court decisions has significantly contributed to
the development of election law. The cases below
will show us about approaches that Justices of
constitutional court argue concerning election law:
1. Case No 22 – 24/PUU – VI/2008
On the determination of the elected candidate in
the DPR, the DPD, dan the DPRD election, the
Court decision has significant impact according to
the case No 22 – 24/PUU – VI/2008. One of the
review on such case is the review on Article 214
a, b, c, d, dan e Law No. 10 Tahun 2008 on the
DPR, DPD, and DPRD election which has the
point to determine the elected candidate who gets
about 30% votes from the BPP, or below when no
one gets 30% from the BPP, or below when no
one gets 30% from the BPP more than
proportional votes for a political party participate
in the election. The Constitutional Court argues
that Article 22E ayat (1) UUD 1945 stipulates that
the election is conducted with broad participation
from people on the basis of democracy principle,
direct, general, free, secret ballot, honest, and fair.
The election of the DPR, the DPD, and the local
DPRD with the proportional system according to
Law No. 10/2008 gives more freedom to the
people in determining legislative candidate. The
Constitutional Court argues the consequences
would be easier to determine who is elected and
the legislative candidate who gets vote or more
support from the people. To this extent, Article
214a, b, c, d, and e the Law No 10/2008 is
contradictive to the Constitution. Therefore it is
decided unconstitutional.
2. Case No. 102/PUU-VII/2009
On the popular case of the usage of identity card,
the Court decided that Article 28 and Article 111
the Law No 42/2008 on the presidential election
is constitutional. The Court made legal norm on
the right to vote for those who is unlisted on the
fixed voter listed (Daftar Pemilih Tetap/DPT).
The formulation of regulation on who and how the
the voting right is implemented for the unlisted
voter is a form of law making process by the
Court. Although the regulation is just an order to
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the general election commission to make
regulation on the unlisted voter which have been
unregistered in the voter list.
3. Case No. 45/PHPU.D-VIII/2010
In general, the decision on the dispute settlement
on the result of general election, including the
election of head of local government is about the
final result of the election. Commonly, the
decision is to determine the voting result or in case
of general election violation. The Court could
order the reelection. Notwithstanding, the Court
decision on the case of Kotawaringin Barat would
be different from other cases in term that the Court
was not only disqualifying the candidates but also
to order general election commission to decide the
mayor and vice mayor is elected.
The Court contribution in election system is not
only from its decision but also in the context of
dispute settlement of the election result, specifically
on the head of local government election. On the case
of head of local government elections, the object
(objectum litis) is the result of the calculation process
as it is regulated on Article 106 Section (2) the local
government Law, which state that “ any objections as
mention in Section (1) is only in terms of the result of
votes calculation which influence the elected
candidate.” Notwithstanding when the constitutional
court conducts trial and decide the dispute settlement
of the result of Eeast Java head of local government,
the Court was not only deciding the dispute
settlement with regards to the vote calculation, but
also conduct trial on the violation which significantly
influenced on the result of vote calculation. On its
consideration on Decision No 41/PHPU.D-VI/2008
on the dispute settlement of the election result of the
Eat Java head of local government, the Court
conducted judicial review on Article 106 Section (2)
of the Law on the local government against the
Constitution. The output of the judicial review is the
interpretation of Article 106 Section (2) the local
government Law. In such case, the case was actually
not about judicial review but on the dispute settlement
of the election result. The judicial review which
conducted by the Court was a pseudo judicial review.
In 2010, when the court decided case No 45/PHPU.D-
VIII/2010 on the dispute settlement of the head of
local government of Municipality Kotawaringin
Barat and other cases, the Court has the same
argument to conduct not only dispute settlement on
the election results, but also violation which
structured, sistematically, and has significant impact
to the votes.
On some arguments, the Court in the context of
judicial review and the dispute settlement of the
election results and response implication to the law
maker, could be implied that the judicial review, the
relationship between the Court and the law maker is
representative of two tension which has dichotomy
character, namely constitutionalism and democracy
with the single question on who the supreme power
on upholding the Constitution (Van Hoecke : 2001).
In some perspectives, the Constitutional Court is
assumed to be beyond its competences. The
Constitutional Court has tendency to be more
activism. The response against such perspective could
be seen in the amendment of the Constitutional Court
Law (Law No. 8 Year 2011). On Article 57 Paragraph
2 (a) of the Law, it is stipulated that in order to limit
the model of the Court decision, the Court Decision
has to be not in the form of ultra petita. Furthermore,
the Court’s Decision has not to be made as norms
since the DPR is the law maker.
On the constitutional perspective, with one of the
characters that the guaranteee and the protection of
human rights, the Court is the guardian to the
constitutional rights of citizens by make sure that Law
is not contradictive to the constitutional norms and
against the constitutional rights.On the other hands,
the representative bodies with the legislative function
is a institution which is elected by the people within
the democratic representative system who has the
authority to determine the public policies. The
product of such institution is Law. The judicial review
which is conducted by the Court is according to the
mechanism of ‘counter majoritarian’ since the Court
in this term annuls Law which had been made on the
basis of majority agreement within the representative
body. In the context of presidentialism, the President
of Republic Indonesia is elected by the people is also
an institution which has the competence as law
maker. Therefore, the judicial review by the Court is
not only as a mechanism of ‘counter-majoritarian’
against the representative body, but also agaisnt the
executive power of the President.
According to democracy perspective, there are
arguments which identified that the judicial review is
against the democracy principle and vice versa.
(Bickel, 1986; Waldron, 2003; Kramer: 2007).
Moreover, on the issue of people soverignty in the
general election as the instrument of the democracy,
in democracy principle (demos and kratia), the
definition of government from and by the people has
the meaning of “rule of the people” which fully
influenced and controlled by the people. Such
concept contains basic idea that the people has the
supreme power to direct within the public domain and
Constitutional Dialogue in the Indonesia Election Law: Tension between the Indonesian Constitutional Court and the Legislature
159
that is being the basic concept which is called
‘responsive rule’or ‘popular rule’, ‘popular
government’ or ‘populer sovereignty’ or people
sovereignty which strictly mentioned in the
Constitution. as a consequence of the people
sovereignty principle, the majority of citizens who
participate in the general election have to hold the
basic power for any policies decisions in the
representative government system (Zurn, 2007;
Hardiman, 2013) . On the concept of people
sovereignty which is identically as the democracy
principle, the judicial institution reviews the
constitutionality of the Law is assumed to be
contradictive to the democracy since the law maker
has more legitimacy and participatory characters than
the judicial institution.
Bickel argues that the prior argument to such
objection for this mechanism of judcial review is
because the argument of ‘counter majoritarian
difficulty’ (Bickel: 1986), meanwhile, a German
Jurist, Schmitt states that the objection of judicial
review is beacuse the fear of the consequence which
is called judicialization of politic and the judicial
institution which tend to have more politic character
rather than judicial character (Boix and Stokes, 2013
). Marmor, argues that the judicial review is not easy
to adjust with the democracy principle since the
commitment against the procedural decision making
on the democracy and judicial power on the
annulment of the legislative decision which has been
elected by the people. (Marmor: 2005). The argument
which mentioned that the judicial review mechanism
is not against the democracy, is argued by Eisgruber
(Eisgruber, 2006) . Accordingly, the judicial review
gains justification in the democracy principle, namely
that the judcial institution upholds democracy values.
Dworkin on his work (Dworkin, 1990) “Bill of Rights
for Britain”, states that the judicial review is needed
since democracy has to be protected from the
majority tyranny. Siahaan (2010), on the same
context as Dworkin, states:
It is true that the duties to review the
constitutionality of Laws is better to be separately
attached to the law maker (the legislative and the
executive). The internal review (legislative review
atau executive review) is assumed has subjective
character.”
Besides democracy arguments, the debate on the
judicial review is also based on the argument of the
separation of powers which implemented in the form
of separation and division of powers. The separation
of powers is by power limits power on the basis of
different function of power. To this extent,
eventhough there are arguments mentioning that the
judicial review is about check and balances against
legislative products, and conducted by the
independent and impartial power, it does not mean
that it could be justified to be taken over by the
judicial institution. Grabenwater (2011), Austrian
Constitutional Court Justice, on his keynote speech
on 2nd Congress of the World Conference on
Constitutional Justice, stated that:
“The constitutional judge who respects the
separation of powers between legislation and the
judicial control of legislation will take due account of
the margin of appreciation, of political questions and
of the democratic legitimacy of decisions of
Parliament.”
3 CONSTITUTIONAL
DIALOGUE AND
PROPORTIONAL ROLE OF
CONSTITUTIONAL COURT
The relationship between the Constitutional Court
and the law maker in the context of the electoral law
making could be seen within the constitutional
Dialague. Constitutional dialogue is about descriptive
concept and normative concept (Dawson, 2013) . The
descriptive concept of constitutional dialogue refers
to the practice of interaction and deliberation between
legislature and the judiciary over how constitutional
commitment should be applied, whereas, in
normative concept, constitutional dialogue is more
than an observation but a means of defending judicial
review (Grabenwater, 2011). Refering tp the three
decisions on the electoral law, the Court seemingly
applied “judicial activism”. It has the meaning that on
the constitutional dialogue framework between the
law maker and the constitutioal court in term of
judicial review shows the domination that the Court
has judiciary supremacy. In general, Butt (2006)
considers that the Indonesian Constitutional Court
could be categorized as adherents of judicial activism
under the first two periods of court leadership.
Furthermore, Butt refers the Court’s activism to
South Korean Constitutional Court. According to his
perspectives, there are two aspects that could indicate
judicial activism, namely the first "active in the sense
that it actually performs its function and invalidates
statutory provisions - or even entire statutes.-as it
deems necessary ". Secondly, it is shown from the
consistency of "rejection of legislative attepts to
restrict what it believes to be its constitutionally
mandated constitutional review of jurisdiction and its
theories at its boundaries of its jurisdiction".
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Referring to the opinion of the Butt, the issue of
judicial activism and the restriction of the judiciary
must depart from the concept of originalism and non
originalism. Since 1990 the term "judicial activism"
and "judicial activist" has been discussed in 3,815
articles and reviews in various journals of law.
Judicial activism and judicial restraint, relating to
"how well they realize the judicial role of bridging the
gap between law and society's changing reality and
the role of protecting the constitution and its values
The term judicial activism was first introduced by
Arthur Schlesinger in January 1947 in Fortune
magazine. Black's Law Dictionary defines judicial
activism as follows:
A philosophy of judicial decision-making whereby
judges allow their personal views about public
policy, among other factors, to guide their
decisions, usually with the suggestion that adherents
of this philosophy tend to find constitutional
violations and are willing to ignore precedent.
Justice Barak (2006), defines judicial activism as
follows:
is the judicial tendency — conscious or
unconscious - to achieve the proper balance
between conflicting social values (such as
individual rights against the needs of the
collective, the liberty of one person against
that of another, the authority of one branch
of government against another) through
change in the existing law (invalidating an
unconstitutional statute, invalidating
secondary legislation that conflicts with a
statute, reversing a judicial precedent) or
through creating new law that did not
previously exist (through interpreting the
constitution or legislation, through
developing the common law).
Criticism or a negative view upon judicial
activism is because judges are deemed to use their
judicial discretion contrary to general principles, such
as the principle that judges only exercise the function
of applying laws made by legislators. Conversely the
judge positioned himself to give consideration to the
political, social, and economic policies even replace
the position of legislator. Judges decide cases or legal
disputes so that they do not become policy-makers,
because "Judges are well versed in the law but they
are manifestly not the best equipped" to translate
"community values into constitutional policies ...”.
To this extent, in terms of building an equal
relationship on the constitutional dialogue, the role of
the Constitutional Court in judicial review is needed,
specifically on the issue of election Law for particular
issue of election system. Such mechanism of dialogue
could be achieved by:
First, on the constitutional issues that clearly
delegated entirely to the legislator, which is often
referred to as an open legal policy, the Constitutional
Court should not overstep the legislative-regulatory
zone as a result of the annulment. This means that the
Constitutional Court retains the power to annul, but
the Constitutional Court has no right to regulate
(making law), since the constitution clearly grants the
power to the legislator. If the Constitutional Court is
oriented to make Laws, it is not necessary to make a
decision with a conditional interpretation model or
the formulation of new norms, but the Court may only
provide sufficient guidance on certain constitutional
issues in the consideration of its decision. Moreover,
the lawmakers will refine or make a new law with the
suggestions according to the Court's decision. As a
consequence of the third point, in the decision, the
Constitutional Court shall explicitly submit its
suggestions to the legislator.
Second, as a consequence of the hierarchy of
Laws and the consequences of the separation of
powers, the Constitutional Court’s decisions may not
contain imperative order to lawmakers to enact law
and to make a law with any substances determined by
the Constitutional Court. However, this is different
from the South African Constitutional Court which
indeed in the Constitution authorizes the
Constitutional Court to review the bill so that the
Constitutional Court's decision becomes the basis of
consideration of the substance of the law in the law
making process. Similarly to the South African Court,
the Hungarian Constitutional Court's authority is ex
officio authorized initiating a case in situation of
omission by the legislature. Therefore, its decision
enforce the legislator to apply the decision in the law
making process. The 1945 Constitution has separated
powers to each of power holders, so the order to make
law is directly derived from the Constitution and not
from the Constitutional Court decision. The
Constitutional Court's decision only resulted to be
followed-up, but not an order for the legislator.
Third, the legitimacy process in the separation
power schemes should be part of the Constitutional
Court's procedures. Especially if the judicial review
of the law is a form of deliberative democracy
conducted by the Constitutional Court, then the
principle of all parties’ views and opinions must be
heard shall be actually done. This principle takes
precedence over the legislators, so it is not
appropriate to review legislation without hearing any
statements from the legislator even though by reason
of urgency. In the cases referred to as the use of the
Constitutional Dialogue in the Indonesia Election Law: Tension between the Indonesian Constitutional Court and the Legislature
161
ID cards and in any similar cases such as the use of
the right to vote, without hearing the statements of the
legislator is a violation of the principle of the audi et
altera partem.
4 CONCLUSIONS
The Indonesian Constitutional Court is the Court
which has the character of judicial activism in judicial
review on the Election Law. Such character of
judicial activism, in this sense, empowers the
principles of fair and democratic election in
Indonesia. However, the design of election in
Indonesia is within political area. At this point, the
Indonesian Parliament has the authority to make
Laws in particular issue of elections. In practice, the
Court’s decisions on the judicial review of the
Election Laws is often being resistence from the
Parliament. Therefore, the Court has to make the
decision more proportionally on the basis of the
principle of separation of powers.
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