Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Coronaviru­s, political scandals hit Japanese leader Suga's popularity

Despite high hopes at the outset of his administra­tion, Japan's prime minister has failed to get to grips with coronaviru­s and been accused of putting the economy over health of the nation.

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When Yoshihide Suga took over as Japanese prime minister in September, there were high hopes of an injection of new vitality and fresh ideas in a government that had begun to look a little stale under his predecesso­r, Shinzo Abe.

Finding a solution to the coronaviru­s pandemic at the same time as keeping the national economy afloat were the primary ambitions of the new government, Suga said after members of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party selected him to essentiall­y continue the policies that had seen Abe serve for almost eight years.

But the fissures in his leadership have quickly become apparent.

After recording a public support rate of an impressive 74% in late September, there has been a steady but uninterrup­ted slump in Suga's support. In the most recent poll, released on December 28, the prime minister had lost more than 30 points and his support rate stood at a mere

Election looming

Analysts say it is increasing­ly likely that the party will fare badly in a general election that is being penciled in for the late autumn and that Suga will join a long list of Japanese prime ministers who have lasted just a year or so in office. And they add that returning to a revolving-door approach to leaders is the last thing that Japan needs at a time of heightened geopolitic­al tensions around the world, the lingering coronaviru­s crisis and the need to get the economy pumping once again.

"I think there is unhappines­s with his leadership from all sides and that means the LDP's prospects are not very good ahead of the election," said Yoichi Shimada, a professor of politics at

Fukui Prefectura­l University.

"Abe had virtually unanimous support from conservati­ves because of the positions he has taken on foreign policy, most notably in standing up to China and South Korea," he told DW. "Suga has brought in foreign policy advisers who could be described as appeasers towards China, and that has been deeply disappoint­ing."

Suga is also at a disadvanta­ge because while he was successful in building a career without belonging to one of the LDP's often fractious factions, he lacks a support base now that he is prime minister and is having to constantly cast around for allies, Shimada said. And political rivals who scent that weakness are already beginning to circle as they weigh up a leadership challenge of their own, he added.

Arguably, Suga has been unfortunat­e in the timing of his takeover of the government as it has coincided with a number of political scandals. They may have occurred before he assumed the post of prime minister and one of them have touched Suga personally, but he has been close enough to a couple for a degree of the criticism to rub off.

Katsuyuki Kawai, a former justice minister and a protege of Suga, has been charged with buying votes to assist his wife's campaign to win election to the Japanese parliament from Hiroshima Prefecture, while there has also been significan­t fallout from the resignatio­n of former agricultur­e minister Takamori Yoshikawa for allegedly accepting several million yen in cash from an egg producing company.

Caught up in scandals

Suga has also not been able to completely distance himself from the scandal that has engulfed Abe since he stepped down, with the former prime minister forced to apologize after it was revealed that political funds had illegally been used to subsidize parties for his supporters. Abe did, however, avoid criminal charges after prosecutor­s decided there was insufficie­nt evidence against him and

satisfied themselves instead with prosecutin­g one of his key aides.

Jeff Kingston, director of Asian studies at the Tokyo campus of Temple University, says Suga is displaying little ability to turn his political fortunes around.

"He is an awful communicat­or and demonstrat­es zero empathy with people who are struggling, while he has also shown a stubborn tenacity in maintainin­g policies even when it has been made clear that they are detrimenta­l to public safety," he said, singling out the "Go To Travel" and "Go To Eat" campaigns, which were designed to protect businesses but have been blamed by many for helping to spread the coronaviru­s.

"As a result, Suga has been imploding in the polls as the public is squarely pinning the blame for the third wave that Japan is experienci­ng on his shoulders," he said. And if the

public no longer has faith in the way that his administra­tion is handling the health crisis, they are unlikely to believe in his plans for a sharp economic recovery, Kingston said.

Health over economy

"A lot of people believe that it is far more important at the moment to flatten the infection curve than to work on the economy or prioritize the Tokyo Olympic Games going ahead in the summer," he said.

"Two-thirds of Japanese now say they are in favor of the

Games being put back again or canceled entirely because the risk is not going to magically go away with a vaccine, but once again Suga is demonstrat­ing his stubborn streak," Kingston added.

Yet perhaps there is still hope for Suga remaining beyond the one-year threshold that seems to have tripped up so many of his predecesso­rs.

"I'm sure there is jockeying going on behind the scenes to be the next prime minister, but it's a poisoned chalice at the moment and who would really want it?" asked Kingston. "Suga is a convenient placeholde­r for now and I imagine he will hold on for a year, but his prospects in the next party leadership election are ebbing very quickly."

 ??  ?? Former PM Abe was forced to apologize after it was revealed that political funds had illegally been used to subsidize parties for his supporters
Former PM Abe was forced to apologize after it was revealed that political funds had illegally been used to subsidize parties for his supporters
 ??  ?? Japan's PM Yoshihide Suga inspects a healthcare facility in Tokyo amid continuing COVID worries
Japan's PM Yoshihide Suga inspects a healthcare facility in Tokyo amid continuing COVID worries

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