Indonesia President Joko Widodo has used speeches after his nomination for election in April to tout his success in wrestling control of the nation’s prized natural resources from foreign companies, a move aimed at stoking economic nationalism, Bloomberg reports. In July, the world’s second largest copper producer, Freeport-McMoRan Inc, agreed to sell a majority stake in its Indonesian subsidiary to a state-owned company, seemingly ending a long-running dispute via a series of complex deals worth $3.85 billion. Widodo’s contender, Prabowo Subianto is also running his campaign along economic nationalist lines. The controversial former general has warned of foreign intruders looking to pilfer Indonesia’s mineral wealth and illegal Chinese workers stealing jobs, according to The Financial Review.