- Beranda
- The Lounge
Disoroti New York Times, Blusukan Jokowi Mendunia
...
![mjavad](https://s.kaskus.id/user/avatar/default.png)
![Avatar border](https://s.kaskus.id/images/avatarborder/1.gif)
TS
mjavad
Disoroti New York Times, Blusukan Jokowi Mendunia
Quote:
![Disoroti New York Times, Blusukan Jokowi Mendunia](https://s.kaskus.id/images/2013/09/27/5495566_20130927074249.gif)
Quote:
Tampaknya apa yang dinyatakan oleh Amien Rais tentang Jokowi sebagai sosok yang populer, perlu kita “amini” bersama. Beliau benar, Jokowi memang tokoh populer. Bahkan sangat mungkin Amien Rais agak meleset — Jokowi lebih populer daripada Estrada.
Setelah selama ini “menguasai” pemberitaan media massa di tanah air, mulai dari media cetak, elektronik, sampai media online, kini giliran harian terkenal dari Amerika Serikat, The New York Times, mengangkat sosok Gubernur DKI ini.
Pemberitaan The New York Times itu tentu saja akan membuka jendela bagi warga dunia, khususnya Amerika, untuk mengenal sang Gubernur Blusukan dari Indonesia ini. Apalagi artikel yang dapat dibaca secara online pada Rabu (25/9/2013) itu membahas kiprah Jokowi secara panjang lebar.
Bertajuk “In Indonesia, a Governor at Home on the Streets“, Joe Cochrane menyoroti kehadiran Jokowi di jalan-jalan di Ibukota untuk berjumpa dengan warganya di kawasan kumuh, pasar tradisional, dan tempat lainnya. “Women, and men, try to touch him. Younger people grab his hands and lay them on their foreheads — a sign of respect,” tulis koran tersebut.
Jika kita baca lebih lanjut artikel tersebut, maka apa yang ditudingkan oleh Amien Rais bahwa Jokowi hanyalah “tong kosong nyaring bunyinya”, tidak sejalan dengan pandangan koran tersebut.
Dalam artikel yang juga hadir dalam versi cetak edisi September 26, 2013 halaman A6, NYT mengulas tentang keberhasilan Jokowi dalam menangani dua proyek besar. Pertama, pembenahan kawasan Tanah Abang yang menjadi pasar tekstil tebesar di Asia Tenggara. Kedua, relokasi 7.000 keluarga dari waduk Pluit sehingga waduk tersebut dapat dikeruk untuk pertama kalinya dalam 30 tahun untuk membantu meringankan banjir tahunan.
Bagaimana Jokowi dapat meraih keberhasilan dalam menangani kedua proyek tersebut? Digambarkan dengan lugas bagaimana Jokowi secara rajin menyambangi kedua lokasi tersebut dalam upaya menghimpunan dukungan agar kedua proyek tersebut dapat terealisasi.
Dalam artikel tersebut, Jokowi digambarkan dan dipuji sebagai politisi yang bersih, yang tidak menggunakan jabatannya untuk memperkaya diri. Sehingga pada sosok ini masyarakat banyak meletakkan harapannya. Seolah sebagai pamungkas, julukan “man of the people” pun disandangkan kepada Gubernur Blusukan ini.
Mau baca selengkapnya?
Setelah selama ini “menguasai” pemberitaan media massa di tanah air, mulai dari media cetak, elektronik, sampai media online, kini giliran harian terkenal dari Amerika Serikat, The New York Times, mengangkat sosok Gubernur DKI ini.
Pemberitaan The New York Times itu tentu saja akan membuka jendela bagi warga dunia, khususnya Amerika, untuk mengenal sang Gubernur Blusukan dari Indonesia ini. Apalagi artikel yang dapat dibaca secara online pada Rabu (25/9/2013) itu membahas kiprah Jokowi secara panjang lebar.
Bertajuk “In Indonesia, a Governor at Home on the Streets“, Joe Cochrane menyoroti kehadiran Jokowi di jalan-jalan di Ibukota untuk berjumpa dengan warganya di kawasan kumuh, pasar tradisional, dan tempat lainnya. “Women, and men, try to touch him. Younger people grab his hands and lay them on their foreheads — a sign of respect,” tulis koran tersebut.
Jika kita baca lebih lanjut artikel tersebut, maka apa yang ditudingkan oleh Amien Rais bahwa Jokowi hanyalah “tong kosong nyaring bunyinya”, tidak sejalan dengan pandangan koran tersebut.
Dalam artikel yang juga hadir dalam versi cetak edisi September 26, 2013 halaman A6, NYT mengulas tentang keberhasilan Jokowi dalam menangani dua proyek besar. Pertama, pembenahan kawasan Tanah Abang yang menjadi pasar tekstil tebesar di Asia Tenggara. Kedua, relokasi 7.000 keluarga dari waduk Pluit sehingga waduk tersebut dapat dikeruk untuk pertama kalinya dalam 30 tahun untuk membantu meringankan banjir tahunan.
Bagaimana Jokowi dapat meraih keberhasilan dalam menangani kedua proyek tersebut? Digambarkan dengan lugas bagaimana Jokowi secara rajin menyambangi kedua lokasi tersebut dalam upaya menghimpunan dukungan agar kedua proyek tersebut dapat terealisasi.
Dalam artikel tersebut, Jokowi digambarkan dan dipuji sebagai politisi yang bersih, yang tidak menggunakan jabatannya untuk memperkaya diri. Sehingga pada sosok ini masyarakat banyak meletakkan harapannya. Seolah sebagai pamungkas, julukan “man of the people” pun disandangkan kepada Gubernur Blusukan ini.
Mau baca selengkapnya?
Quote:
Ini Berita di Website New York Times nya gan
Ini linknya : In Indonesia, a Governor at Home on the Streets
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Each day, Joko Widodo, the governor of Jakarta, does something practically unheard-of among Indonesia’s political elite: he ventures into the streets to speak with the people who elected him.
Most times, he is mobbed as he wanders through slums, traditional markets and other neighborhoods. Women, and men, try to touch him. Younger people grab his hands and lay them on their foreheads — a sign of respect. Many share their concerns over how their city is working (or not), a practice he encourages.
The people, he jokes, are not so much excited to see him; they are merely “shocked to see an Indonesian leader out of their office.”
“The people say it’s ‘street democracy’ because I go out to them,” said Mr. Joko, 52, whose supporters affectionately call him by his nickname, Jokowi. “I explain my programs. They can also give me ideas about programs.” He also drops in on local government and tax offices to let the city’s notoriously inefficient bureaucrats know he is watching.
That daily routine is one of the main reasons Mr. Joko, a reed-thin former furniture dealer, has almost overnight shot to the top of the polls about possible candidates for next year’s presidential election. In late August, the country’s most influential daily newspaper, Kompas, displayed his photo on its front page three days in a row along with poll results showing him with nearly double the support of the closest challenger, a retired Army general. The poll also found he had swept past the leader of his own party: former President Megawati Sukarnoputri, a famously imperious leader who sometimes referred to her supporters as “little people.”
“He’s the opposite of the leaders we have now. He doesn’t fit the mold at all,” said Bhimanto Suwastoyo, chief editor of the online Jakarta Globe. “The mold is: an Indonesian official does what he wants, has no connection with the people and doesn’t consult — he rules. Jokowi is doing the exact opposite. He’s hands on, he asks the public what they want, he approaches them and he’s seen as actually doing something.”
What Mr. Joko has accomplished in his first year leading the capital is not high-profile. In fact, people give him at least as much credit for what he appears not to have done. In a country rife with corruption, Mr. Joko is widely considered a clean politician who has not used his office to enrich himself, and who is working hard to cut down on corruption within the government.
The issue of official corruption is expected to be a major factor in the election, the third direct presidential election since the country threw off autocratic rule 15 years ago.
The economy has been doing well — it survived the world’s 2008 financial crisis virtually untouched, multinationals have been flocking here and its gross domestic product has expanded at a steady rate of more than 6 percent for the last three years. Still, analysts consistently say Indonesia is being held back from reaching its full potential because of corruption and collusion among government officials, lawmakers and powerful business interests.
The current president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, swept into power in 2004 and was re-elected in 2009 on an anticorruption platform, but his governing Democratic Party has been mired in corruption scandals the past two years.
With months to go before the election, anything can happen to derail Mr. Joko’s chances. The retired general who ran second in the Kompas poll, Prabowo Subianto, has a strong following among the poor and has been considered a top contender for the presidency, despite widespread allegations of human rights abuses in East Timor. (Mr. Prabowo and Mr. Joko are members of opposition parties; Mr. Yudhoyono cannot run again because of term limits.)
Since becoming governor last October, Mr. Joko has followed through on his campaign promises, including issuing welfare payments on the equivalent of electronic gift cards that allow people to pay for health care and education supplies directly and ensure government officials do not take a cut off the top. He also instituted an online tax payment system to prevent graft and jump-started long-delayed plans for a mass rapid transit system for the capital.
Ini linknya : In Indonesia, a Governor at Home on the Streets
JAKARTA, Indonesia — Each day, Joko Widodo, the governor of Jakarta, does something practically unheard-of among Indonesia’s political elite: he ventures into the streets to speak with the people who elected him.
Most times, he is mobbed as he wanders through slums, traditional markets and other neighborhoods. Women, and men, try to touch him. Younger people grab his hands and lay them on their foreheads — a sign of respect. Many share their concerns over how their city is working (or not), a practice he encourages.
The people, he jokes, are not so much excited to see him; they are merely “shocked to see an Indonesian leader out of their office.”
“The people say it’s ‘street democracy’ because I go out to them,” said Mr. Joko, 52, whose supporters affectionately call him by his nickname, Jokowi. “I explain my programs. They can also give me ideas about programs.” He also drops in on local government and tax offices to let the city’s notoriously inefficient bureaucrats know he is watching.
That daily routine is one of the main reasons Mr. Joko, a reed-thin former furniture dealer, has almost overnight shot to the top of the polls about possible candidates for next year’s presidential election. In late August, the country’s most influential daily newspaper, Kompas, displayed his photo on its front page three days in a row along with poll results showing him with nearly double the support of the closest challenger, a retired Army general. The poll also found he had swept past the leader of his own party: former President Megawati Sukarnoputri, a famously imperious leader who sometimes referred to her supporters as “little people.”
“He’s the opposite of the leaders we have now. He doesn’t fit the mold at all,” said Bhimanto Suwastoyo, chief editor of the online Jakarta Globe. “The mold is: an Indonesian official does what he wants, has no connection with the people and doesn’t consult — he rules. Jokowi is doing the exact opposite. He’s hands on, he asks the public what they want, he approaches them and he’s seen as actually doing something.”
What Mr. Joko has accomplished in his first year leading the capital is not high-profile. In fact, people give him at least as much credit for what he appears not to have done. In a country rife with corruption, Mr. Joko is widely considered a clean politician who has not used his office to enrich himself, and who is working hard to cut down on corruption within the government.
The issue of official corruption is expected to be a major factor in the election, the third direct presidential election since the country threw off autocratic rule 15 years ago.
The economy has been doing well — it survived the world’s 2008 financial crisis virtually untouched, multinationals have been flocking here and its gross domestic product has expanded at a steady rate of more than 6 percent for the last three years. Still, analysts consistently say Indonesia is being held back from reaching its full potential because of corruption and collusion among government officials, lawmakers and powerful business interests.
The current president, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, swept into power in 2004 and was re-elected in 2009 on an anticorruption platform, but his governing Democratic Party has been mired in corruption scandals the past two years.
With months to go before the election, anything can happen to derail Mr. Joko’s chances. The retired general who ran second in the Kompas poll, Prabowo Subianto, has a strong following among the poor and has been considered a top contender for the presidency, despite widespread allegations of human rights abuses in East Timor. (Mr. Prabowo and Mr. Joko are members of opposition parties; Mr. Yudhoyono cannot run again because of term limits.)
Since becoming governor last October, Mr. Joko has followed through on his campaign promises, including issuing welfare payments on the equivalent of electronic gift cards that allow people to pay for health care and education supplies directly and ensure government officials do not take a cut off the top. He also instituted an online tax payment system to prevent graft and jump-started long-delayed plans for a mass rapid transit system for the capital.
0
7.2K
Kutip
49
Balasan
![Guest](https://s.kaskus.id/user/avatar/default.png)
![Avatar border](https://s.kaskus.id/images/avatarborder/1.gif)
Komentar yang asik ya
Mari bergabung, dapatkan informasi dan teman baru!
![The Lounge](https://s.kaskus.id/r200x200/ficon/image-21.png)
The Lounge![KASKUS Official KASKUS Official](https://s.kaskus.id/kaskus-next/next-assets/images/icon-official-badge.svg)
923.4KThread•84.4KAnggota
Urutkan
Terlama
![Guest](https://s.kaskus.id/user/avatar/default.png)
![Avatar border](https://s.kaskus.id/images/avatarborder/1.gif)
Komentar yang asik ya