When a political figure is dubbed the puncture repair man by his own people—whether in the banter of a roadside stall, the comments beneath an online post, or the editorial columns of a newspaper—it is not merely a spontaneous insult hurled in frustration. Within it lies a theory of leadership: that this leader works only at the surface, not at the root; that he responds to leaks rather than preventing them; that his governance is a succession of emergency measures that never matures into structural reform.
This essay is born of an intellectual curiosity about the workings of metaphor within the discourse of leadership—how a single symbol can strike so deeply at the heart of public perception, and what is concealed or indeed revealed when one image is chosen above another. It should be stated plainly that the metaphor of the "puncture repairman" as employed in this essay is in no way directed at President Prabowo Subianto.
THE PUNCTURE REPAIRMAN
A Metaphorical Essay on Leadership
Symbol, and the Ways a Nation Perceives Its Leaders
I. The Anatomy of a Metaphor: Meaning in Layers
1.1 The Literal Meaning: A Trade at the Crossroads
Taken literally, the puncture repair man is an informal worker operating at the roadside, offering his services to those whose tyres have failed them. He is there because he is needed. He appears in moments of minor crisis—when a vehicle halts without warning, when a journey is suddenly threatened. His presence is reactive by nature: he is never there before the tyre goes flat.
Within the informal economy of Indonesia, the puncture repair man occupies a singular position: he is a micro-entrepreneur surviving in the gaps of the system, uncovered by social insurance, unregistered with any ministry, yet indispensable precisely because poorly maintained roads continue to produce punctures without end. In other words, he sustains his livelihood from a systemic failure that is never permanently resolved.
The first irony presents itself at once: if the roads were properly repaired, the puncture repairman would lose his trade. There is, then, a kind of vested interest in the perpetuation of defective conditions.
1.2 The Symbolic Meaning: Leadership as Perpetual Emergency
When this metaphor is applied to a leader, it carries the whole of that framework with it. The leader-as-puncture-repair-man implies:
First, leadership that is reactive rather than transformative. It moves after the crisis, not before. Policy is born of leakage, not of planning.
Second, solutions that are temporary by nature. A patch is an interim promise, not a resolution. It may hold for a month, or it may burst tomorrow morning again.
Third, an inability to perceive the larger picture. The puncture repair man works with his head bent low, focused on a single point of failure. He is not redesigning the vehicle.
Fourth, a diminished social standing. Within the social hierarchies of Indonesian life, informal roadside labour carries an implicit lowness of status—and to affix such an attribute to a head of state is a contradiction both sharp and entirely deliberate.
1.3 The Satirical Register: Between Laughter and Fury
Indonesian satire habitually operates in the register of guyon pait—bitter comedy: laughter felt in the mouth, a wound felt in the chest. The epithet puncture repair man is not a crude insult; it is criticism wrapped in humour, the better to circulate freely, the harder to refute, and the longer to be remembered.
There is a long tradition in Indonesian political life—from the mocking pantun of the colonial era to the banned caricatures of the New Order—in which people employ oblique language to voice dissatisfaction that cannot be expressed head-on. The puncture repair man metaphor continues this tradition: it formally accuses nothing yet communicates everything.
The humour works because of the glaring incongruity it produces: the enormity of the office set against the meanness of the image (a man crouching at the roadside, a patch-kit in hand, a temporary hope in his pocket). The greater the distance between reality and symbol, the louder the laughter—and the deeper the wound.
II. Social Connotations: Why This Symbol Cuts So Deep
2.1 Class and Dignity: A Map That Is Never Neutral
Indonesia is a society acutely conscious of class, even when it declines to acknowledge the fact openly. The choice of a profession as metaphor is never neutral: it always carries with it a complete social atlas. When someone is called the architect of the nation, he is positioned within the intellectual class—those who design the future from above. When he is called the puncture repair man, he is positioned at the roadside—not in the conference chamber, not behind the planner's desk, but beneath the full heat of the sun, amidst exhaust fumes and dust.
More pointed still: in the popular imagination, the trade of puncture repair is associated with a powerlessness to alter the system. The puncture repair man possesses neither the capital, the access, nor the authority to mend roads, to manufacture quality tyres, or to regulate the flow of traffic. He can only respond to the damage that arrives before him. To attach this metaphor to a leader is to say: he labours within a system he himself cannot—or will not—change.
2.2 Masculinity and the Expectations of Power
There is, too, a dimension of gender worth examining. In the political culture of Indonesia—and this holds across the ideological spectrum—the ideal leader is habitually portrayed through images of vigour: decisive, visionary, standing erect, gazing far towards the horizon. Sukarno, with his oratory ablaze. Suharto with his flat, authoritative stare.
The puncture repair man crouches. He does not stand erect. He does not gaze at the horizon. He stares at a small hole in the road before him. This choice of posture—though never stated explicitly—contributes powerfully to an image of leadership that is limp, lacking in authority, trapped in petty particulars. This is not merely a matter of class; it is a matter of the masculine codes of power that operate within our political culture.
2.3 Time and Vision: Who Is Looking Ahead?
The puncture repair man works within a very short temporal horizon: this tyre, right now, so that the vehicle can move again today. He is not thinking about next year, let alone the generation that follows. In the discourse of leadership, long-term vision is one of the principal distinguishing marks of the great leader as against the merely competent one.
This metaphor, therefore, is not simply a criticism of style but a criticism of substance: that the leadership in question neither possesses nor is capable of implementing a structural strategy that transcends the daily crisis. That it lives in fire-fighting mode, attending to one puncture after another, never once pausing to ask: why do these tyres keep going flat?
III. Metaphorical Contrasts: When a Different Symbol Is Chosen
To understand fully what the puncture repair man metaphor does, we must set it against other available metaphors of leadership—those that have been used of the same figure at different moments, or those that might plausibly have been chosen instead.
3.1 The Architect: Vision from an Elevation
To call a leader an architect is to suppose a person who possesses the blueprint—who understands the structure in its entirety before a single brick is laid. He works at the drawing board before he descends to the site. He is designing not for today, but for decades hence.
The connotations are clear: intellectual, deliberate, long-term, technically accomplished. The architect does not crouch at the roadside—he stands at the top of the scaffolding, or sits in an air-conditioned office gazing upon the scale model of the city he intends to build.
When a leader is called the architect of reform or the architect of development, the public perception that forms is of a leader who possesses a grand design—one whose actions today are constituent parts of something far larger. Partial failures can be forgiven because construction takes time; minor miscalculations can be tolerated because even the builder of great edifices occasionally misjudges a beam.
3.2 The Helmsman: Command in the Midst of the Storm
The metaphor of the helmsman — or the ship's captain — is among the most universal figures of leadership. It supposes a person who holds the wheel in conditions of uncertainty, who knows the bearing the vessel must keep even when the waves cannot be predicted.
The connotations are again distinct: courage, composure under pressure, goal-orientation, and legitimate authority over the crew. The helmsman, too, works reactively — he responds to the storm — but he does so from a position of command, not of crouching supplication. And there is a clear destination: the harbour.
What is particularly instructive here is that the helmsman and the puncture repairman both respond to a crisis. Yet one does so standing at the bridge with a compass in hand, whilst the other does so crouching on the tarmac with a rusted tool. It is the contextualisation of the crisis that determines the perception.
3.3 The Physician: Diagnosis Before Treatment
Leadership, imagined as the physician, carries more ambiguous connotations, yet ones that remain considerably more dignified than the puncture repairman. The physician diagnoses before he treats; he understands the disease more deeply than his patient does; he works according to a scientific protocol rather than by instinct alone.
Yet the physician metaphor, too, admits of a negative reading: the doctor who treats symptoms without addressing causes. In the discourse of public health, this is the distinction between the curative and the preventive approach—and the same criticism may be directed at a leader: is he curing the disease, or merely suppressing the symptoms?
Tellingly, even in its negative form, the physician who treats only symptoms retains a dignity denied to the puncture repair man. The physician, at least, possesses a degree, a consulting room, and a recognised social standing. The social hierarchy embedded within the metaphor speaks more loudly than the content of the criticism itself.
3.4 The Fire-Fighter: A Respected Reactivity
Here lies the most instructive comparison of all: the fire-fighter and the puncture repair man are functionally very similar—both reactive, both crisis-driven, both at work after something has already broken or burned. Yet their social connotations are worlds apart
The firefighter is a hero. He enters the blaze. He risks his life. When a leader is called a fire-fighter, the criticism remains (he is reactive, he does not prevent fires), yet it is wrapped in admiration for his courage. The puncture repair man commands no such heroic aura; he deals with small holes, not infernos. The scale is different, and in matters of public perception, scale determines honour.
The lesson of this comparison is significant: our judgment of reactive leadership depends enormously upon the scale of the threat being addressed. A leader who responds to a great crisis—war, pandemic, natural catastrophe—swiftly and steadily will be judged heroic even if his action is reactive. A leader who appears to respond only to small problems that ought never to have arisen will be judged by a far humbler metaphor.
IV. How Symbols Shape Public Perception
4.1 Metaphor as Framing
George Lakoff, in his work on political framing, argues that metaphor is not mere ornament — it is a cognitive structure that determines how we evaluate facts. When a metaphor successfully attaches itself to a public figure, it does not simply name him; it reframes the entire history of his actions in a new and unforgiving light.
Once the puncture repair man epithet circulates widely, policies that might previously have been read as pragmatism begin to be read as incapacity. Programmes that might have been seen as a response to the needs of the people begin to appear as a result of the absence of vision. The same things—the same actions, the same figures—are read differently depending upon the metaphorical lens already fitted within the public mind.
4.2 Virality and the Stickiness of Symbols
An effective metaphor in the digital age possesses one indispensable quality: it is easily visualised. The puncture repair man is a concrete, universal, and instantly recognisable image—every Indonesian has seen him at the roadside. This is quite different from, say, "a leader lacking a grand design"—which is abstract, lengthy, and resistant to becoming a meme.
The viral power of this metaphor lies in its extraordinary cognitive economy: in two words, an entire critical theory of leadership is communicated. And because it can be visualised, it becomes caricature, illustration, animation—content that spreads in ways that no five-thousand-word policy analysis ever could.
4.3 Resilience Against Rational Rebuttal
One of the most formidable qualities of metaphor as a political weapon is its resistance to rational counterargument. If someone attacks a specific policy as a failure, the figures can be contested: growth rates, poverty indices, and infrastructural achievements. But how does one refute the epithet of puncture repair man?
To do so, one must demonstrate that this leader is not reactive, not provisional, not narrow in vision— and that demonstration requires a rhetorical effort vastly more complex than the original epithet. Meanwhile, the name has already circulated, already stuck, already raised laughter in a million WhatsApp groups.
A good metaphor is a blade sharpened but once, yet capable of cutting indefinitely.
4.4 The Legacy of Perception: What History Remembers
The history of leadership is more often remembered through images than through statistics. Sukarno is remembered as the lion of the podium. Suharto as the cold, impassive father of development. These metaphors become the master frame through which everything else is subsequently read.
If the puncture repair man succeeds in becoming the dominant metaphor for a leader within the collective memory of a nation, then his historical legacy will be read through that lens — even where genuine achievements exist that might, under fairer conditions, be assessed with greater equity. The symbol that attaches itself earliest endures the longest, for it is the framework within which all subsequent information is sorted and placed.
V. A Reflection: On What Is Just and What Is Not
This essay, like any satire that retains its intellectual honesty, must be willing to turn its scrutiny upon itself.
There is something unjust in the puncture repair man metaphor, and candour demands that we acknowledge it. It is unjust because it reduces the complexity of leadership to a single image. To govern a nation of hundreds of millions, with extraordinary heterogeneity, within a geopolitical and economic context of unrelenting pressure, does sometimes feel rather like repairing a tyre in the middle of a motorway that never empties.
Not every reactive response is evidence of incapacity. Not every temporary solution signals an absence of vision. There is a leadership that is precisely wise because it understands the limits of the possible—that does not pretend to possess a grand design when the conditions genuinely preclude its execution.
But herein lies the dilemma that faces every leader: public perception does not wait upon context. It does not read the budget report before forming its judgment. It feels—and what the public feels, whether correct or not, becomes the political reality that must be confronted.
The puncture repairman metaphor may not be entirely just. But it is a mirror — not one that flatters, but one that, in its caricatured and pitiless way, reflects what the people feel. And the feelings of the people, at the end of the day, constitute one of the judgment-seats from which no leader can ultimately escape.
Afterword: Patching or Building?
At the end of that road, the puncture repair man still crouches. His hands are still black. Around him, new holes continue to appear, because the asphalt was never properly laid, because the budget was redirected elsewhere, because the grand design—the blueprint for something greater—remains, it seems, perpetually deferred.
Perhaps he is not to blame. Perhaps he is doing the only thing possible with the resources at hand. Perhaps, without him, the tyres would all have burst long since, and the nation's journey would have halted far sooner than it did.
But the people do not wish merely to keep moving. They wish to arrive. And to arrive at a destination—rather than simply to persist along the road—requires more than a patch. It requires a sound tyre. A decent road. And a leader who understands the difference between deferring the collapse and building resilience.
Metaphor is the people's tribunal: it sits without a prosecutor, without a defendant present, and without the possibility of appeal. Its verdict is delivered in laughter, remembered in song, and bequeathed in stories. And within that verdict, there is concealed a wounded hope: the hope that the next leader will not crouch at the roadside, but will stand upon the foundations he himself has laid—and will invite the whole nation to stand alongside him.