China Daily (Hong Kong)

Reports say Japan PM Abe eyes snap election this year

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TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is considerin­g calling a snap election as early as next month to take advantage of an uptick in approval ratings and disarray in the main opposition party, domestic media reported on Sunday.

Abe’s ratings have recovered to the 50 percent level in some polls, helped by public jitters over missile and nuclear tests by the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea and chaos in the opposition Democratic Party, struggling with single-digit support and defections.

Abe told the head of his Liberal Democratic Party’s junior coalition partner, the Komeito party, that he could not rule out dissolving parliament’s lower house for a snap poll after the legislatur­e convenes for an extra session from Sept 28, public broadcaste­r NHK reported, citing unidentifi­ed informed sources.

“Until now, it appeared the election would be next autumn, but ... we must always be ready for battle,” media quoted Komeito party chief Natsuo Yamaguchi as telling reporters on Saturday during a visit to Russia.

Speculatio­n has mounted over a snap election on Oct 22, when three by-elections are scheduled, although other possibilit­ies are later in October or after US President Donald Trump makes a likely visit in early November, media said.

Abe’s ratings had sunk below 30 percent in some surveys in July, battered by suspected cronyism scandals and a perception that he had grown arrogant after more than four years in office.

His popularity rebounded a bit after an early August cabinet reshuffle and has since been helped by worries over the DPRK, which on Friday fired a ballistic missile over Japan, its second such move in less than a month.

“All the lower house members are beginning to think that (general elections) would come in the not too distant future,” LDP senior official Wataru Takeshita said in a speech in the western Japanese city of Tokushima.

An early vote would not only take advantage of Democratic Party disarray but also dilute a challenge from an embryonic party that allies of popular Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, an ex-LDP lawmaker, are trying to form.

Abe’s coalition would likely lose its two-thirds “super” majority” in the lower house, but keep a simple majority, political sources have said.

Loss of the two-thirds grip would dim prospects Abe can achieve his controvers­ial goal of revising Japan’s pacifist constituti­on to clarify the military’s role. Any constituti­onal amendment requires approval by twothirds of both chambers and a majority in a public referendum.

“I am skeptical about the consensus that Abe will call a snap election because doing so poses a risk, albeit small, to his agenda of constituti­onal revision,” said Jeffrey Kingston, director of Asian studies at Temple University Japan.

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