Sartono
{{Short description|Indonesian politician and lawyer (1900–1968)}}
{{Good article}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2022}}
{{For|other people named Sartono|Sartono (given name)}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| honorific_prefix = Raden Mas
| name = Sartono
| image = Sartono, Kepartaian dan Parlementaria Indonesia (1954).jpg
| alt = Black-and-white portrait of a man in front of a blank background
| caption = Official portrait, {{circa|1954}}
| order = 1st
| office = Speaker of the House of Representatives (Indonesia){{!}}Speaker of the House of Representatives
| term_start = 23 February 1950
| term_end = 24 June 1960
| predecessor = Office established
| successor = Zainul Arifin
| office1 = President of Indonesia
| status1 = Acting
| term_start1 = 21 April 1959
| term_end1 = 2 July 1959
| term_start2 = 6 January 1959
| term_end2 = 21 February 1959
| term3 = {{circa|December 1957}}
{{Collapsed infobox section begin
| last = yes
| Legislative offices
| titlestyle = border:1px dashed lightgrey;}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| embed = yes
| office3 = Member of the House of Representatives
| term_start3 = 15 February 1950
| term_end3 = 24 June 1960
| office4 = Member of the Central Indonesian National Committee
| term_start4 = 29 August 1945
| term_end4 = 15 February 1950
{{Collapsed infobox section end}}
}}
{{Collapsed infobox section begin
| last = yes
| Advisory offices
| titlestyle = border:1px dashed lightgrey;}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| embed = yes
| office5 = Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Advisory Council
| term_start5 = 6 March 1962
| term_end5 = 14 February 1968
| office6 = Member of the Supreme Advisory Council
| term_start6 = 6 March 1962
| term_end6 = 14 February 1968
| office7 = Member of the Central Advisory Council
| term_start7 = 4 October 1943
| term_end7 = 17 August 1945
{{Collapsed infobox section end}}
}}
| birth_date = {{birth date|1900|8|5|df=y}}
| birth_place = Wonogiri, Dutch East Indies
| death_date = {{death date and age|1968|10|15|1900|8|5|df=y}}
| death_place = Jakarta, Indonesia
| resting_place = Astana Bibis Luhur
| party = Indonesian National Party
(1927–1931; 1945–1968)
| otherparty = {{ubl|Partindo (1931–1937)|Gerindo (1937–1942)}}
| spouse = {{marriage|Siti Zaenab|1930}}
| children = 3
| alma_mater = Leiden University (Mr.)
| occupation = {{hlist|Politician|lawyer}}
| signature = Signature of Sartono.svg
| signature_size = 150px
| signature_alt = Signature of Sartono
}}
Sartono (5 August 1900 – 15 October 1968) was an Indonesian politician and lawyer who served as the first speaker of the House of Representatives (DPR) from 1950 until his resignation in 1960. He also served as acting president several times in his capacity as speaker following the resignation of Mohammad Hatta. Born into a Javanese family of noble blood, Sartono studied law at Leiden University. During his studies, he joined the Perhimpoenan Indonesia association and became an advocate for Indonesian independence. After graduating, he opened a law practice and helped found the Indonesian National Party (PNI) in 1927. He unsuccessfully defended the party's leaders when they were arrested by the colonial government in 1929.
Following the arrests, the PNI disbanded and Sartono founded a new party, Partindo, which sought to achieve independence through non-cooperation. However, Partindo was dissolved in 1936. He then helped found another party, Gerindo, which advocated for the creation of an Indonesian parliament. In 1942, Japan invaded the colony and Sartono briefly left politics before returning as general-secretary of a Japan-founded labor organization, Putera, a year later. He also served in several positions during the Japanese occupation period, including as a member of the Central Advisory Council and Investigating Committee for Preparatory Work for Independence.
After the proclamation of independence in 1945, he was appointed a state minister in the Presidential Cabinet by President Sukarno. As minister, he was dispatched to the Yogyakarta Sultanate and Surakarta Sunanate to shore up support for the nationalist government. During the subsequent national revolution, he became a member of the Central Indonesian National Committee (KNIP), serving in the KNIP's working body which ran its day-to-day affairs. In 1949, he became an advisor to the Indonesian delegation of the Dutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference before being elected speaker of the DPR of the United States of Indonesia in February 1950.
Sartono would go on to serve as speaker throughout the entire liberal democracy period, being re-elected in August 1950, when the Provisional DPR was formed, and again in 1956, following the 1955 elections. In 1951, he was tasked with forming a new government following the fall of the Natsir Cabinet. He, however, failed to form a government after less than a month. In 1960, the DPR was suspended by Sukarno following its rejection of the government’s budget. Deeply embittered by the suspension, he resigned from the DPR and did not take public office for several years. In 1962, Sartono accepted an offer by Sukarno to serve as the deputy chairman of the Supreme Advisory Council (DPA). His time in the body "confused and irritated him,"{{sfn|Lev|1969|p=191}} and he resigned from the DPA in 1968. He died in Jakarta, on 15 October 1968, and was buried at Astana Bibis Luhur, Surakarta.
Early life and career
Sartono was born in Wonogiri, near what is today Surakarta, on 5 August 1900.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1956| p = 83}} Born to a noble ethnic-Javanese family, he was the second oldest of seven children. His father, Raden Mas Martodikarjo, was a civil servant who was a descendant of Prince Mangkunegara II. His mother was a noblewomen, who was a descendant of Prince Mangkunegara III.{{cite web | title = Sartono, Meester in de Rechten di Kursi Pertama Ketua Parlemen Indonesia | url = https://www.hukumonline.com/berita/baca/lt5dee18e79d5af/sartono--imeester-in-de-rechten-i-di-kursi-pertama-ketua-parlemen-indonesia/ | publisher = hukumonline.com | access-date = 5 January 2022 | language = id}}{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 4}} In 1906, he left Wonogiri and began his education at the Europeesche Lagere School in Surakarta, a school only for children of noble descent. There, he graduated in 1913, with the highest grade. After graduating, he was accepted to the Meer Uitgebreid Lager Onderwijs (MULO) school also in Surakarta.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| pp = 5 – 7}} Sartono spent three years in MULO, from 1913 until 1916, and after graduating, he left for Batavia.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 10}}{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 17}} In Batavia, he entered the School tot Opleiding voor Inlandsche Rechtskundigen, later known as the Rechts School, a law institute for the native Indonesian nobility.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 11}}{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| pp = 15 – 16}}
At Rechts School, he joined the Tri Koro Dharmo organization, a youth organization of Budi Utomo, which later evolved into Jong Java.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 19}} In 1921, he passed in his law examination, and received the title of "rechtskundige" (jurist). After graduating, he became a civil servant at the District Court in Surakarta for around six months.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 20}} In September 1922, Sartono left his job as a civil servant, and departed to the Netherlands, to study for a doctorate in law at Leiden University, along with his former classmate Iwa Koesoemasoemantri. The pair departed from Surakarta to the port of Tanjung Priok, the main hub for transportation from the colony to Europe.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 23}} They arrived in Genoa, Italy, before taking the train to the Netherlands.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 24}} During his studies in Leiden, he joined the Perhimpoenan Indonesia association, and became the associations secretary from 1922 until 1925.{{sfn|Anderson|1972| p = 438}}{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1999| pp = 33 – 35}}
Early political career
{{See also|Indonesian National Party}}
After completing his studies, Sartono returned to the Indies in 1925, and opened a law practice in the city of Bandung,{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1956| p = 83}} together with his friends from Leiden (including Iskaq Tjokrohadisurjo, Budiarto Martoatmodjo, and Soenario). The young advocates were successful in handling the legal actions of Dutch authorities.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 38}} One notable case they handled was the trial of a man named Jasin, who was a train conductor from Tasikmalaya. Jasin was accused of being part of the failed 1926 communist revolt. As a result of Sartono's defense, Jasin's punishment was lightened, but he was still found guilty, and exiled to the Boven-Digoel concentration camp, in West New Guinea.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 39}} Sartono later participated in the founding of the Indonesian National Party (PNI) at Bandung on 4 July 1927.{{sfn|Ingleson|2014| p = 122}} Following the 1929 PNI congress in Yogyakarta, he was appointed as treasurer of the party.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 55}} He also became the legal adviser during the second Indonesian youth congress in 1928 – which resulted in the Youth Pledge.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 59}}
File:Sartono, cover of Mr. Sartono Karya dan Pengabdiannya (1985).jpg
In 1930, the Dutch colonial government arrested four of the PNI's leaders, and later sentenced them to prison time.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| pp = 68–73}} Sartono was not arrested, and instead he became one of Sukarno's defense lawyers during Sukarno's trials in Bandung.{{cite news | last1 = Djemat | first1 = Humphrey | title = The 'Officium nobile' of legal aid | url = https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/08/27/the-officium-nobile-legal-aid.html | access-date = 4 August 2019 | work = The Jakarta Post | date = 27 August 2013 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190804223703/https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/08/27/the-officium-nobile-legal-aid.html | archive-date = 4 August 2019 | url-status = live}} In 1931, Sartono founded the Partindo party, after the disbanding of the PNI. During his leadership of Partindo, he created a department for labor unions, which Sartono directly managed. Despite this, Sartono argued that labor unions should not engage in politics.{{sfn|Ingleson|2014| p = 179}} Sartono led Partindo until 1933, when the released Sukarno was elected the party chief and Sartono became his deputy.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1956| p = 84}}{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| pp = 68 – 73}} Around the same period, the Swadeshi movement in Colonial India began capturing the attention of the many politically active Indonesians.{{sfn|Ingleson|2014| pp = 185 – 186}} This included Sartono, who became an advocate for the movement, and also chaired a commission on the movement within Partindo.{{sfn|Ingleson|2014| p = 187}}
After Sukarno's election as leader, however, Sukarno's view that labor unions should be associated with political parties became dominant – and in 1933, the party's official position became that labor unions must be based on political parties.{{sfn|Ingleson|2014| pp = 223 – 224}} Partindo was again disbanded in 1937, and Sartono further took part in the founding of another party, Gerindo, where he was deputy chief under Amir Syarifuddin.{{sfn|Anderson|1972| p = 438}}{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 101}} He also remained a lawyer, successfully defending another nationalist Kasman Singodimedjo in a 1940 case.{{cite news |last1=Yasin |first1=Muhammad |title=Sartono, Meester in de Rechten di Kursi Pertama Ketua Parlemen Indonesia |url=https://www.hukumonline.com/berita/a/sartono--imeester-in-de-rechten-i-di-kursi-pertama-ketua-parlemen-indonesia-lt5dee18e79d5af/?page=all |access-date=17 January 2025 |work=hukumonline.com |date=10 December 2019 |language=id}} Following the successful Japanese invasion of Indonesia, Sartono briefly left politics and handled rubber plantations in the Bogor region.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 102}} He was also head of the organizational section of the Japan-founded labor organization Putera and a member of the Javanese Central Advisory Council, also set up the occupation government. In 1945, he was appointed as a member of the Investigating Committee for Preparatory Work for Independence.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 102}} For some time, he was also the adviser to the Japanese Department of Internal Affairs between December 1944 until June 1945.{{sfn|Anderson|1972| p = 438}}{{cite book | author = Arniati Prasedyawati Herkusumo | title = Chuo Sangi-in: Dewan Pertimbang Pusat Pada Masa Pendudukan Jepang | language = Indonesian | trans-title = Chuo Sangi-in: The Central Advisory Council during the Japanese Occupation | publisher = PT. Rosda Jayaputra | location = Jakarta | year = 1982 | pages = 35–36}}
National revolution
{{See also|Indonesian National Revolution|Central Indonesian National Committee}}
File:Gedung Kesenian Jakarta, 2018.jpg (pictured in 2018), where the Central Indonesian National Committee first convened in]]
Shortly after the proclamation of Indonesian independence, Sartono was appointed as one of five ministers of state (alongside Oto Iskandar di Nata, Mohammad Amir, Wahid Hasyim, and A.A. Maramis).{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 107}} Sartono and Maramis were dispatched to Central Java's traditional monarchies (the Surakarta Sunanate and Yogyakarta Sultanate) to give assurances that the monarchies would remain in exchange for support of the new nationalist government.{{sfn|Anderson|1972| p = 115}} On 19 August 1945, he took part in a meeting which resulted in the agreement to form the Central Indonesian National Committee (KNIP).{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| p = 6}} Sartono also rejoined the reformed Sukarno-led PNI.{{sfn|Anderson|1972| p = 93}} The party had significant internal issues due to personal and ideological differences of its members, with Mohammad Hatta remarking in an interview with Irish historian Benedict Anderson that Sartono and Abikusno Tjokrosujoso had internal conflicts almost immediately after its founding.{{sfn|Anderson|1972| p = 98}}
In December 1945, he became chief of the political department of a further restructured PNI.{{sfn|Anderson|1972| pp = 227–228}} Sartono was a member of the KNIP and was part of its leadership until October 1945, when the leadership was replaced by a new group of younger members.{{sfn|Anderson|1972| pp = 174–175}} Later, he would return to the leadership positions, becoming deputy chair of the body's Working Committee (which ran day-to-day affairs) by January 1947.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| pp = 20–22}} He lost the position in an election in April 1947, but was voted back in July 1949.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| p = 25}} He left the body in 1949 as he joined the People's Representative Council of the United States of Indonesia (DPR-RIS).{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| p = 24}} He had been appointed as the head of a good offices mission to the State of East Indonesia in December 1948, but the mission was cancelled.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1956| p = 83}}{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 108}} During the Dutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference, Sartono also served as a general adviser for the Indonesian delegation.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 108}}
Post-Independence career
= Early speakership: 1950–1956 =
{{See also|Liberal democracy period in Indonesia}}
Following the Dutch recognition of Indonesian sovereignty, Sartono joined the DPR-RIS, and was elected as the body's speaker on 21 February 1950, after defeating Mohammad Yamin and Albert Mangaratua Tambunan in the leadership vote, taking office the following day.{{cite book | last1 = Pringgodigdo | first1 = Abdoel Gaffar | title = Ensiklopedi Umum | authorlink = Abdoel Gaffar Pringgodigdo | date = 1991 | publisher = Kanisius | isbn = 9789794135228 | pages = 981–982 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=BJrFsQ0SwzgC&pg=PA982 | language = id}} Six months later, on 16 August, the body was dissolved as the United States of Indonesia was transformed into a unitary state, and all its members became members of the newly formed Provisional People's Representative Council (DPRS).{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| pp = 117 – 118}} Sartono was again elected speaker of the body on its 19 August leadership vote.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| p = 140}} Sartono was appointed as formateur for the government cabinet on 28 March 1951 following the fall of the Natsir Cabinet, and he attempted to form a coalition government between the PNI and the Masyumi.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| p = 148}}{{cite book | last1 = Muttaqin | first1 = Fajriudin | title = Sejarah Pergerakan Nasional | date = 2015 | publisher = Humaniora | isbn = 9789797782696 | page = 157 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=RFAyDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA157 | language = id}} However, his efforts were thwarted due to policy differences between the two parties - namely, on taxation, local government, and the West New Guinea dispute.{{sfn|Feith|2006| pp = 177–178}}
This was made worse by Sartono's unwillingness to become the prime minister or any cabinet minister.{{sfn|Feith|2006| pp = 177–178}} His failure led to him returning his mandate after less than a month on 18 April. The task was then assigned to Soekiman Wirjosandjojo and Sidik Djojosukarto – who managed to form the Sukiman Cabinet.{{sfn|Feith|2006| pp = 179–180}} During the Wilopo Cabinet period, Sartono called for the resignation of Hamengkubuwono IX as Defense Minister in the aftermath of the 17 October affair.{{sfn|Feith|2006|p=272}} Due to the government dysfunction caused by constant tensions between government and opposition parties in the parliament, Sartono went as far as to warn legislators in December 1953 that the parliament may be dissolved if tensions continued to increase.{{sfn|Feith|2006|p=364}} By 1955, the election saw highly divisive campaigning, and Sartono made a public statement asking political parties to "not forget good manners" when referring to one another.{{sfn|Feith|2006| pp = 283-284}}
= Later speakership: 1956–1960 =
{{See also|Guided Democracy in Indonesia}}
In 1956, there were proposals in the parliament to dissolve the Netherlands-Indonesian Union. A draft law was brought up during a 28 February 1956 meeting of the body, and following a vote it was accepted as agenda in the day's meeting.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| pp = 177 – 179}} Sartono, who disagreed with the draft's inclusion, declared his resignation from speakership and walked out of the building, followed by his deputy Arudji Kartawinata and the PNI faction. On 1 March, members of the PNI, the Indonesian Islamic Union Party and the PKI, in addition to some members of the Nahdlatul Ulama submitted their resignations as members of the parliament.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| pp = 177–179}} Still in March, Sartono secured a seat representing Central Java in the new People's Representative Council (DPR) as a result of the 1955 election.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1956| p = 83}} Members of the body were sworn in on 20 March 1956, with the DPRS being dissolved, and Sartono was again elected as speaker.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| pp = 189 – 192}}
Following the resignation of Mohammad Hatta from his post as vice president (leaving it vacant until 1973),{{cite book | last1 = Younce | first1 = William C. | title = Indonesia: Issues, Historical Background and Bibliography | date = 2001 | publisher = Nova Publishers | isbn = 9781590332498 | page = 65 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=H6O0K65WqQ8C&pg=PA65 | language = en}} Sartono was legally second in the presidential line of succession, and he conducted presidential duties for three brief periods during his tenure - in December 1957, between 6 January and 21 February 1959, and between 21 April and 2 July 1959.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| p = 209}} On 23 July 1959, following President Sukarno's 1959 Decree, and the return to the 1945 Constitution, Sartono was sworn again as the speaker of the further renewed DPR.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| p = 222}} The DPR was eventually suspended by Sukarno on 24 June 1960 (though it met last on 5 March), ending Sartono's tenure as speaker.{{sfn|People's Representative Council|1983| p = 239}} After the DPR was suspended, Sartono did not take public office for several years. Allegedly, he refused all positions offered to him, though in one occasion he implied to Foreign Minister Subandrio that he would accept an ambassadorship for an African country – with the condition that Subandrio himself and Mohammad Yamin were both also assigned to similar positions.
Death and legacy
After several years of being unemployed, Sartono accepted an offer by Sukarno to serve in the Supreme Advisory Council (DPA), as the body's vice speaker in 1962.{{cite web | title = Keputusan Presiden Republik Indonesia No. 126 Tahun 1962 | url = https://sipuu.setkab.go.id/PUUdoc/12498/KP%20NO%20126%20TH%201962.htm | publisher = Cabinet Secretariat of Indonesia | access-date = 4 August 2019 | language = id }}{{Dead link|date=September 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} Throughout his time in the parliament – and during his time at DPA – Sartono pushed with little success laws meant to strengthen the government's financial accountability. American scholar Daniel Lev wrote that Sartono's experience in the body "was a great disappointment to him".{{cite journal | authorlink = Daniel Lev | last1 = Lev | first1 = Daniel S. | title = In Memoriam: R. M. Sartono | journal = Indonesia | url = https://ecommons.cornell.edu/bitstream/handle/1813/53455/INDO_7_0_1107139648_191_193.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y | date = 1969 | issue = 7 | pages = 191–193 | issn = 0019-7289| jstor = 3350809 }} He eventually resigned from the DPA and left politics entirely in 1967. He died in Jakarta on 15 October 1968, and was buried in Surakarta. According to author and historian, Nyak Wali Alfa Tirta, Sartono was a quiet, but well liked person, by both his opponents and friends.{{sfn|Alfa Tirta|1985| p = 112}} The city government of Surakarta, along with the Mangkunegaran family foundation, have campaigned to make Sartono a National Hero of Indonesia.{{cite web | title = Mr. Sartono Layak Menjadi Pahlawan Nasional | url = https://jatengprov.go.id/beritadaerah/mr-sartono-layak-menjadi-pahlawan-nasional/ | website = jatengprov.go.id | date = 3 August 2018 | publisher = Central Java Provincial Government | access-date = 5 August 2019 | language = id | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190805082718/https://jatengprov.go.id/beritadaerah/mr-sartono-layak-menjadi-pahlawan-nasional/ | archive-date = 5 August 2019 | url-status = live}} A street in the city of Malang is named after him.{{cite news | title = Jalan Sartono SH, Gerbang Masuk Pasar Comboran Malang | url = https://ngalam.co/2019/10/27/jalan-sartono-sh-gerbang-masuk-pasar-comboran-malang/ | access-date = 9 February 2020 | work = ngalam.co | date = 27 October 2019 | language = id}}
References
= Citations =
{{reflist|15em}}
= Sources =
{{refbegin|30em}}
- {{cite book | last1 = People's Representative Council | author-link1 = People's Representative Council | editor-last1 = | editor-first1 = | editor-link1 = | translator-last1 = | translator-first1 = | translator-link1 = | year = 1956 | title = Hasil Rakjat Memilih Tokoh-tokoh Parlemen (Hasil Pemilihan Umum Pertama – 1955) di Republik Indonesia | title-link = | url = http://repositori.dpr.go.id/100/1/HASIL%20RAKYAT%20MEMILIH%20TOKOH-TOKOH%20PARLEMEN_1.pdf | language = id | trans-title = Result of People Electing Parliamentary Members (Result of the First General Election – 1955) in the Republic of Indonesia | location = Jakarta | publisher = Secretariat General of the People's Representative Council | pages = 83–84 | access-date = 7 December 2021 | archive-date = 23 July 2019 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20190723141457/http://repositori.dpr.go.id/100/1/HASIL%20RAKYAT%20MEMILIH%20TOKOH-TOKOH%20PARLEMEN_1.pdf | url-status = dead }}
- {{cite book | last1 = Alfa Tirta | first1 = Nyak Wali | author-link1 = Ministry of Education and Culture | editor-last1 = Surjomihardjo | editor-first1 = Abdurachman | editor-link1 = Ministry of Education and Culture | editor-last2 = Leirissa | editor-first2 = R. Z. | editor-link2 = Ministry of Education and Culture | editor-last3 = Kartadarmadja | editor-first3 = M. Soenjata | editor-link3 = Ministry of Education and Culture | translator-last1 = | translator-first1 = | translator-link1 = | year = 1985 | title = Mr. Sartono: Karya dan Pengabdiannya | title-link = | url = http://repositori.kemdikbud.go.id/12937/1/MR.%20SARTONO.pdf | language = id | trans-title = Mr. Sartono: His work and dedication | location = Jakarta | publisher = Ministry of Education and Culture | pages = | access-date = 7 December 2021 }}
- {{cite book | last1 = Feith | first1 = Herbert | title = The Decline of Constitutional Democracy in Indonesia | date = 2006 | publisher = Equinox Publishing | isbn = 978-979-3780-45-0 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=VAH0W9uxoqoC | language = en }}
- {{cite book | last1 = Ingleson | first1 = John | title = Workers, Unions and Politics: Indonesia in the 1920s and 1930s | date = 2014 | publisher = Brill | isbn = 978-90-04-26476-2 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ygPbAgAAQBAJ | language = en | access-date = 8 December 2021 }}
- {{cite book | last1 = People's Representative Council | author-link1 = People's Representative Council | editor-last1 = | editor-first1 = | editor-link1 = | translator-last1 = | translator-first1 = | translator-link1 = | date = 3 December 1983 | title = Seperempat Abad Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat Republik Indonesia | title-link = | url = http://repositori.dpr.go.id/81/1/SEPEREMPAT%20ABAD%20DPR%20RI.pdf | language = id | trans-title = A Quarter Century of the People's Representative Council of the Republic of Indonesia | location = Jakarta | publisher = Secretariat General of the People's Representative Council | access-date = 7 December 2021 | archive-date = 7 April 2023 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20230407163920/http://repositori.dpr.go.id/81/1/SEPEREMPAT%20ABAD%20DPR%20RI.pdf | url-status = dead }}
- {{cite book | last1 = People's Representative Council | author-link1 = People's Representative Council | editor-last1 = | editor-first1 = | editor-link1 = | translator-last1 = | translator-first1 = | translator-link1 = | date = August 1999 | year = 1999 | title = Profil Ketua-Ketua DPR RI sejak tahun 1945 s/d Agustus 1999 | title-link = | url = http://repositori.dpr.go.id/210/1/PROFIL%20KETUA%20DPR%20SEJAK%20TAHUN%201945%20-%20AGUSTUS%201999.pdf | language = id | trans-title = Profiles of the Chairmen of the Indonesian People's Representative Council from 1945 to August 1999 | location = Jakarta | publisher = Secretariat General of the People's Representative Council | pages = 33–39 | access-date = 7 December 2021 | archive-date = 12 November 2021 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20211112072707/http://repositori.dpr.go.id/210/1/PROFIL%20KETUA%20DPR%20SEJAK%20TAHUN%201945%20-%20AGUSTUS%201999.pdf | url-status = dead }}
- {{cite book | last1 = Anderson | first1 = Benedict Richard O'Gorman | author-link1 = Benedict Anderson | title = Java in a Time of Revolution: Occupation and Resistance, 1944 – 1946 | date = 1972 | publisher = Cornell University Press | isbn = 978-0-8014-0687-4 | url = https://archive.org/details/javaintimeofrevo0000ande | url-access = registration | language = en | access-date = 8 December 2021 }}
{{refend}}
{{Commons category|Sartono}}
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{{succession box | before = Office established | title = Speaker of the People's Representative Council | after = Zainul Arifin | years = 1950 – 1960}}
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{{Members of the Investigating Committee for Preparatory Work for Independence}}
{{Authority control}}
Category:Indonesian independence activists
Category:Indonesian National Party politicians
Category:Leiden University alumni
Category:Members of the House of Representatives (Indonesia), 1950
Category:Members of the House of Representatives (Indonesia), 1955
Category:Members of the Central Advisory Council
Category:People from Wonogiri Regency
Category:People of the Indonesian National Revolution
Category:Speakers of the House of Representatives (Indonesia)