China Daily

Election win doesn’t mean Abe can amend Constituti­on

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Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe won a big mandate from voters in a snap election, a result analysts say would embolden him to push for the amendment to Japan’s pacifist Constituti­on for the first time since its implementa­tion after World War II and double down on economic stimulus.

The Liberal Democratic Partyled ruling coalition secured twothirds majority in the lower house of Parliament with almost all results decided on Sunday, taking Abe one step closer to a record third term. And Abe would become the longest serving Japanese prime minister in the modern era if he remains in office until 2020.

Despite a string of alleged cronyism scandals and the ensuing approval rate crisis earlier this year, Abe managed to regain some footing and won a major gamble of calling an early election. The rewards may be bountiful for Abe but carry mixed implicatio­ns for Japan and other countries.

It is no secret that Abe wants to revise Japan’s pacifist Constituti­on to address “increasing security threats, an aging society and the need for economic revival”. Among the most contentiou­s proposed revisions is the one seeking to add a clause to Article 9 of the Constituti­on — which in its present form says Japan will not maintain armed forces to ensure it does not wage a war again — to transform Japan Self-Defense Forces into a fullfledge­d military.

The ruling LDP-Komeito coalition has reportedly won 313 of the 465 seats in the lower house. And any amendment to the Constituti­on first requires two-thirds approval of the parliament, and then a simple majority in a public referendum.

Although Abe looks set to gain sufficient support for constituti­onal revision in parliament, whether he will get majority support in a referendum is not clear. In an NHK survey before the election, 32 percent of the respondent­s said they support Abe’s proposal, while 21 percent opposed it and 39 percent were uncertain.

What made Abe’s huge election victory possible were an opposition in disarray, a factor he sought to capitalize by dissolving the lower house last month to force the snap polls, as well as economic recovery and the support of younger generation­s, even bad weather.

The Party of Hope, led by Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike, lost Tokyo No 10 district that used to be Koike’s parliament­ary base, wining a meager 49 seats. The Constituti­onal Democratic Party of Japan, formed by members of the has-been Democratic Party, won 54 seats and became the largest opposition party in the lower house. But neither party has enough numbers to make a difference.

“Abenomics”, or Abe’s economic policy of ultra-loose monetary policy and big fiscal spending, has taken effect, raising hopes of many Japanese people, especially young voters, stuck in a “survival crisis”. In response to Abe’s election win, the Nikkei Stock Average rose 1.1 percent in early Asia trade, registerin­g a record 15th session of consecutiv­e gains.

Bad weather often favors candidates who have well-mobilized supporters and chair the ruling party. When a powerful typhoon approached Japan last weekend, loosely organized “swing voters” were less likely to go out to the nearest polling stations to cast their vote, while LDP, with a record of mobilizing local voters, might have taken advantage of the former’s absence.

An LDP-Komeito coalition on the fast track to constituti­onal revision does not mean Japan may be able to relive its military past at the cost of China-Japan relations.

There’s a silver lining in the cloud: Trade exchanges between China and Japan remain active despite political tensions, strengthen­ing their economic bond. And the United States, which drafted Japan’s post-World War II constituti­on, will still have a say in the possible revisions.

An LDP-Komeito coalition on the fast track to constituti­onal revision does not mean Japan may be able to relive its military past at the cost of China-Japan relations.

Yu Qiang is a researcher in Japan studies at University of Internatio­nal Relations. The article is an excerpt from his interview with China Daily’s Cui Shoufeng.

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