Article 6G2SD The Guardian view on south-east Asian dynasties: political leaders are keeping it in the family | Editorial

The Guardian view on south-east Asian dynasties: political leaders are keeping it in the family | Editorial

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Editorial
from US news | The Guardian on (#6G2SD)

Indonesia's president was welcomed as the first to have emerged from outside its elites. Now his son is being propelled towards power

The handing down of power from father to son sounds like it belongs to the age of kings and emperors. Yet dynasties continue to thrive in democracies as well as dictatorships, as Canada's current prime minister, Justin Trudeau, demonstrates. A 2018 study found that more than one in ten leaders worldwide came from families where a close relative was already involved in politics.

Now dynastic rule appears to be entrenching itself further in south-east Asia. After four decades in charge, and following another stage-managed election, Cambodia's authoritarian leader Hun Sen this year handed over the prime ministership to his son, Hun Manet. The West Point-educated leader reportedly has a more diplomatic manner than his father, but there is no sign that he plans to diverge from him politically.

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