China Daily

Japanese PM admits recent plunge in support is of serious concern

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TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is facing his biggest political crisis since taking office more than five years ago, as suspicions swirl about a land sale to a school operator with ties to his wife.

Abe has denied that he or his wife, Akie, intervened in the heavily discounted sale of state-owned land to the school operator, Moritomo Gakuen, or that he sought to alter documents related to the deal.

While vowing to thoroughly investigat­e the scandal, Abe admitted that a recent plunge in support was of serious concern.

Finance Minister Taro Aso, a close Abe ally, has also denied involvemen­t in alteration­s officials in his ministry made to the documents.

But a spate of weekend opinion polls showed support for Abe’s cabinet sinking as low as 31 percent, with majorities saying he bears some responsibi­lity.

The sagging support could dash his hopes of winning a third three-year term as leader of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party in a September party election. A victory would put him on track to become Japan’s longest-serving premier.

Below are possible scenarios for Abe’s political future.

Ratings recover, Abe wins third term

Last year, Abe, 63, also saw his ratings plummet over the Moritomo land deal and other matters. The LDP suffered a historic trouncing in a Tokyo assembly election.

But he recovered in the polls, and his LDP-led coalition won a two-thirds “super majority” in a snap lower house election in October, helped by fragmentat­ion of the opposition parties, low turnout and his stern stance toward Pyongyang’s nuclear and missile threats.

That could happen again, especially if there are no further big revelation­s in the Moritomo affair, no fresh scandals appear and Abe demonstrat­es skill on the diplomatic front.

Abe could decide to sacrifice

If Abe’s ratings fall further and stay low, he may decide to step down before the September vote, although having quit once, he is probably reluctant to do so again. Abe abruptly resigned in 2007 after a year in office plagued by scandals in his cabinet, a deadlocked parliament and poor health.

If he steps down, Abe may try to throw his support behind former foreign minister Fumio Kishida, 60, to succeed him with backing from other party heavyweigh­ts. Kishida now serves as LDP policy chief.

The LDP would have to hold a special leadership vote, but could just poll members of parliament rather than including rank-and-file members. That would give Kishida, a low-key lawmaker

A weakened Abe could last until September, when he could step aside or run again and face a potentiall­y fierce faceoff with Ishiba.

If other rivals also throw their hats in the ring, the antiAbe vote could be divided enough for him to eke out a victory. But if that happened, he could have trouble pushing his controvers­ial agenda of revising the pacifist, postwar Constituti­on and deregulati­ng the labor market.

The election would include votes by both members of parliament and the rank-andfile, which could give Ishiba, 61, an advantage.

Internal Affairs Minister Seiko Noda, 57, has also expressed a desire to run, but is thought to have little chance of winning.

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