Cabinet minister After
World War II ended, he continued his activities in politics and government, becoming deputy minister of education in the
first Indonesian cabinet. He would go on to serve as
Minister of Education in the
Amir Syarifuddin Cabinet and the
Hatta Cabinet. He then served as deputy chairman of the delegation of the Republic of Indonesia in negotiations with the Netherlands and became a member of the delegation of the Republic of Indonesia in the negotiations of the
Round Table Conference.
Prime ministership After the
Wilopo Cabinet's fall, following the killing of five peasants near
Medan while removing squatters from foreign-owned estate lands, in what became known as the “
Tanjung Morawa affair,” Ali was chosen to lead the
new cabinet, which was formed after over six weeks of bargaining and five different attempts at various party combinations. The cabinet was different from the previous cabinet, as its members were overwhelmingly new, with only four of its twenty members having participated in any of the preceding four cabinets. On 25 August 1953, the new prime minister, Ali Sastroamidjojo, announced a 16-month schedule for elections starting from January 1954. On 4 November 1953, Ali Sastroamidjojo and his cabinet announced the creation of the new Central Electoral Committee ("
Panitia Pemilihan Indonesia"), the forerunner to the
General Elections Commission. The Committee was to replace the previous cabinet's short-lived Assaat committee. The committee included all of the parties represented in the government, which included the
Nahdatul Ulama (NU), the
Indonesian Islamic Union Party (PSII), the Indonesian People's Party (PRI), the
National People's Party (PRN), the
Labor Party, and the
Peasants Front of Indonesia (BTI), as well as the government-supporting
Islamic Education Movement (Perti) and the
Indonesian Christian Party (Parkindo). upon his arrival in Beijing, 26 May 1955. Under the cabinet, the bureaucracy was expanded with more PNI officials, and the economy was under a period of Indonesianization, with the government encouraging indigenous businessmen to open new firms. In practice, however, many new firms were bogus fronts for arrangements between government supporters and Chinese, which became known as "
Ali Baba firms," in which an Indonesian (‘Ali’) was front man for a Chinese (‘Baba’) entrepreneur. After the recognition of the sovereignty of the Republic of Indonesia, he was appointed the first Indonesian Ambassador to the
United States,
Canada, and
Mexico, from 1950 until 1955. In addition, he was also appointed chairman of the
Asian-African Conference in
Bandung. In July 1960, at the ninth annual congress of the PNI, Sastroamidjojo was elected party chairman.
PNI chairman The
Indonesian National Party (PNI), of which Ali was a part, had failed to confront Indonesia's political problems coherently. During the years of
Suwiryo's leadership, chaos pervaded the party's provincial organization. This resulted in a growing challenge from the young and left-wing camp, which eventually formed
Partindo, a new left-wing party. Though the party didn't gain mass support, it reflected the wide criticisms against the PNI under Suwiryo's leadership. In the 9th PNI Congress, held in
Surakarta,
Central Java, in July 1960, Ali was chosen to head the party, replacing the ineffective Suwiryo. As head of the PNI, Ali was described as "a consummate politician imbued with a healthy sense of self-preservation", but often disappointed his supporters from the young and left-wing camp by often positioning himself in the middle. Under his leadership, the PNI carried out organizational reforms to restore the authority of the central leadership, with increased coordination of party activities with mass organizations. These reforms resulted in the increasing membership of the party, with only 198,554 names being registered in April 1961, and rising dramatically to 1,858,119 names by the time of the 10th Party Congress. A new rule was later issued in 1961, which regulated party-organizational relations, and specifies that the party is the "
vanguard organization" in the
Marhaen movement, and the party leadership serves as the "guide" of the mass organizations affiliated with it. After the 10th PNI Congress in
Purwokerto, Ali Sastroamidjojo was re-elected as general chairman, with a new figure known as Surachman, a young figure who was previously active in the Peasants and farmers wing of the party, was elected general secretary. Ali also moved the party further to the left. This was seen in his speech to commemorate the 36th PNI Anniversary, which took place on 7 July 1963, at the
Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, then known as the Senayan main stadium, where Ali adhered to
Sukarno's limits, saying "…The doctrine (
Marhaenism) and the program of struggle based on scientific socialism are further based on
Marxist socialism, for it was only after
Marx that scientific socialism was developed." The working committee of the PNI Congress also agreed that Marhaenism is a form of Marxism "which is applied by the conditions and situation of Indonesia." The PNI also reiterated its ideals as a party for the marhaens to fight imperialism, neo-colonialism, and capitalism. However, the issue of division began to take root within the PNI, between the more left-wing camp under Ali and Surachman and the camp of the conservatives under
Osa Maliki, Sabilal Rasjad, Hardi,
Hadisubeno Sosrowerdojo and
Mohammad Isnaeni. Following the failed
30 September Movement coup, led by the
Communist Party of Indonesia (PKI), the political winds began to shift. The division between the left-wing camp and the conservative camp, which had continued to deepen, reached a breaking point. At the extraordinary congress in Bandung, from 21 to 27 April 1966, the left-wing Ali and Surachman camp was overthrown by the conservative camp, with Osa Maliki being elected chairman. It was said that General
Ali Moertopo was directly involved in the Congress to purge the left wing from the PNI. == Death and legacy ==