Gulf Today

Japan’s Koike steps down as party head

Koike’s support imploded partially because she failed to stand herself in the election confusing voters who did not know who would be premier if she won

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TOKYO: Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, once seen as a possible irst Japanese female prime minister, stepped down as leader of her party on Tuesday after suffering a crushing election defeat last month.

Vowing to do away with “old politics,” the charismati­c former television anchorwoma­n launched a new party in September that aspired to offer an alternativ­e to the long-governing Liberal Democratic Party and its leader Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in the Oct.22 snap elections.

Her new “Party of Hope” ielded 235 candidates for the poll but won a mere 50 seats while Abe’s ruling coalition grabbed a two-thirds majority.

Koike’s support imploded partially because she failed to stand herself in the election − confusing voters who did not know who would be premier if she won.

In opinion polls conducted by the Sankei Shimbun at the weekend, support for her party dropped to 3.9 per cent from 9.5 per cent last month, with more than 77 per cent of respondent­s calling on her to concentrat­e on her job as Tokyo governor.

“Stepping down as the head, I want to support you in an appropriat­e capacity,” Koike told a party conference after it selected its executive members.

Koike said she would stay within the party while focusing on her job as governor of Tokyo, with the capital set to host the Summer Olympics in 2020.

“I have inished my responsibi­lities as the founder,” she told reporters.

“As governor I will put the metropolit­an administra­tion irst and cooperate with lawmakers of a reborn Party of Hope,” she added.

The 65-year-old was elected Tokyo governor last year, one of several jobs the trailblaze­r has been the irst woman to ill.

She once complained that Japan has not just a glass ceiling but an “iron plate” holding women back.

The creation of the “Party of Hope” sent shock waves through Japanese politics and caused the immediate implosion of the main opposition party, as scores of members pinned their colours to the Koike mast.

But critics attacked her both for lacking a clear policy platform and for taking a dictatoria­l approach to the new party − she reportedly forced potential members to sign a pledge that was leaked to the media.

“It was a complete defeat,” Koike admitted after the election, acknowledg­ing she had been guilty of “arrogance.”

 ??  ?? Yuriko Koike
Yuriko Koike

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