The Phnom Penh Post

Even from ‘hell hole’, Abe rules on

- Kelly Olsen

LESS than six months ago Prime Minister Shinzo Abe appeared poised to stay in power until 2021, becoming Japan’s longestser­ving leader and cementing a coveted place in history.

Now, the humbled hawk finds himself fighting for his political life or, in the words of one observer, scrambling to crawl out of a “hell hole”. What went wrong? A combinatio­n of factors, including nagging political scandals, arrogance, loss of trust and tone deafness to voters’ everyday concerns at the expense of a nationalis­t agenda have clipped Abe’s wings.

But analysts say Japan’s comeback kid has an ace up his sleeve likely to seal his rule for at least another year. There is no one else. “It’s the utter absence of an alternativ­e political choice, either outside the LDP or quite frankly within it” that keeps him afloat, said Brad Glosserman, a Japan expert at think tank Pacific Forum CSIS in Honolulu, referring to the ruling Liberal Democratic Party which Abe leads.

Indeed, the main opposition Democratic Party is imploding, its very existence seen at stake. And while the LDP has no shortage of prime ministeria­l hopefuls, none of them are seen as strong enough to take on Abe right now.

And though many have swooned over the potential of charismati­c Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, she is just a year into the job and has her hands full with the 2020 Olympics.

Trouble brewed slowly but anger spilled over last month when surveys showed a precipitou­s decline in support, with Abe’s approval ratings reaching their lowest point over more than four years in office.

Historic drubbing

Accusation­s Abe wielded influence for a close friend in a business deal – which he has consistent­ly denied – were a key factor, as were other scandals including at the defence ministry headed by his protege and fellow hawk Tomomi Inada.

And just before local elections in early July for Tokyo’s munici- pal assembly – a bellwether for national sentiment – he further alienated voters by shouting down hecklers at a rally.

The result: the LDP suffered a historic drubbing.

Veteran analyst Minoru Morita, a harsh Abe critic who came up with the “hell hole” analogy, said he also suffers from predictabl­e weariness with a longservin­g leader.

“No matter the government in Japan, after three to four years the people will grow tired of it,” he said.

Still, Morita believes that if Abe can get through the next year and stand for re-election as party leader in September 2018, he is likely to win as he has more internal support than even leading challenger­s.

Voters also appear resigned to more Abe.

“In the end he may be able to continue in the sense that there just isn’t anybody else,” said Tokyo resident Ayumi Aratake.

Abe last week reshuffled his cabinet ministers, a typical move by Japanese prime ministers in trouble.

He called in a former defence chief to take over for Inada, who quit under fire the week before, and embraced party critics. Publicly he has replaced swagger with humility.

‘Listen to the people’

It seems to have stemmed the bleeding. A slew of media opinion polls at the weekend showed support rates creeping up. Abe has no need to call parliament­ary elections until December 2018.

Whether loved or loathed, the 62-year-old Abe is a compelling figure and political blueblood with a grandfathe­r and great uncle preceding him as prime minister. He came back to power in December 2012 after a failed 2006-2007 turn as leader. Some had written him off, but he won a rare second chance.

Abe brought an ambitious policy blitz with a catchy name – Abenomics – meant to slay growth-sapping deflation.

While the programme has had some success, healthy annual price gains remain far off while consumer spending is weak.

There has long been a feeling Abe puts too much emphasis on matters dear to his conservati­ve heart, such as revising Japan’s pacifist constituti­on and wiping away the shame of World War II defeat and occupation.

Glosserman sees a pattern of building up political capital with economic wins only to quickly squander it.

“Abe again has to do that pivot back to taking care of things that matter to Japanese voters,” he said.

The prime minister seems to have gotten the message.

“I will listen to the voices of the people,” he vowed after the cabinet shakeup, apologisin­g for the scandals that have rocked his government. “Reviving the economy is the top priority.”

 ?? KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP ?? Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe attending a budget committee session of the House of Representa­tives at parliament in Tokyo in February.
KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe attending a budget committee session of the House of Representa­tives at parliament in Tokyo in February.

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