The Phnom Penh Post

Abe stung by huge assembly defeat

- Kyoko Hasegawa

ACHASTENED Japanese prime minister vowed yesterday to win back public support after his party suffered a historic drubbing in local elections that media chalked up to growing arrogance and analysts said threatened his continued hold on power.

The Sunday polls, in which Shinzo Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party lost more than half its seats in the Tokyo metropolit­an assembly, were seen as a bellwether for national political sentiment and came as Abe is buffeted by a series of setbacks and scandals that have driven down his popularity.

A new political party set up by former TV anchorwoma­n Yuriko Koike, elected Tokyo governor in a landslide vote last year, was able to capitalise on this to seize 49 seats out of 127, becoming the leading group in the capital’s assembly in Sunday’s election.

“We have to take [the result] seriously as a severe criticism against our party the LDP,” a humbled Abe told reporters yesterday morning, after its seat count shrunk from 57 to just 23, a record low.

“I’m determined to reshape the party to work together and win back trust among the public through realising achievemen­ts,” he said.

Abe was elected prime minister in late 2012 with a mandate to revitalise the world’s thirdlarge­st economy.

But the 62-year-old is under fire over claims he showed favouritis­m to a friend in a business deal, which the prime minister has denied.

Those came a few months after he was forced to deny connection­s to the controvers­ial director of a school that had purchased government land at a huge discount – and counted Abe’s wife as its honourary principal.

Other problems have included the perception his government has railroaded sensitive legislatio­n through parliament and gaffes by members of his cabinet.

Just days before the election, Abe’s controvers­ial defence minister, Tomomi Inada – in the name of her ministry and the Self-Defence Forces, Japan’s military – called on Tokyo voters to support the LDP in the vote.

The comments drew widespread condemnati­on and the outcry forced Inada to retract the remark.

Constituti­onal revision

Koike, 64, a former member of parliament and defence minister, is widely seen as having ambitions to return to national politics and has been touted as a strong candidate to be Japan’s first female prime minister.

After the election, her Tomin First party increased its assembly seats to 55 by admitting six further candidates who had run as independen­ts.

And Komeito – a moderate party backed by a Buddhistli­nked group – has long sided with Abe in national politics but is cooperatin­g with Koike’s local party in Tokyo.

Its 23 seats, plus another belonging to a smaller party, give Koike and her allies effective control of 79 seats in the assembly, a comfortabl­e majority.

“The defeat comes from the Abe administra­tion’s missteps, and [the Tokyo vote results] would encourage non-Abe factions inside the LDP to move towards seizing power,” Sadafumi Kawato, professor of politics at the University of Tokyo, said.

“This could threaten the existence of the Abe administra­tion,” Kawato added, noting he faces a party leadership vote in September next year, and must call an election for the powerful lower house of parliament by December 2018.

His plans to make the firstever changes to Japan’s postwar pacifist constituti­on by 2020 “may be delayed significan­tly without high public support for his government”, Kawato said.

Leading national dailies blamed the administra­tion for the rout, pointing to a lack of accountabi­lity amid the scandals and the forcing through of a parliament­ary vote last month on a controvers­ial anti-terror bill.

“The government would never win back public trust . . . unless it overhauls its arrogant nature”, the conservati­ve mass circulatio­n Yomiuri daily said on its front page.

Despite Koike’s surge and talk of her possibly transformi­ng national politics, media pointed out that she herself faces significan­t challenges.

The liberal Asahi daily noted in an editorial that Koike has “few tangible achievemen­ts” so far and must steer the city through its hosting of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, which have been plagued by scandals and cost overruns.

 ?? KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP ?? Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrives at his official residence in Tokyo yesterday.
KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe arrives at his official residence in Tokyo yesterday.
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