Business Standard

JAPAN’S VOTERS POISED TO GIVE ABE FRESH MANDATE

- ISABEL REYNOLDS

More than 100 million voters head to the polls on Sunday in an election that may clear the way for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to become Japan’s longest-serving leader.

Polls project that Abe’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party and coalition partner Komeito will maintain control of parliament while two opposition groups vie for second place. It’s unclear if Abe’s coalition will retain its two-thirds majority, which would make it easier for them to pass changes to the constituti­on.

A victory for Abe would bring continuity to economic policies, including the massive monetary easing that has weakened the yen and bolstered exports in Asia’s second-biggest economy. He’s campaigned on his economic record, which includes six straight quarters of growth and low unemployme­nt even as he’s struggled to defeat deflation and boost pay. Trump, North Korea Abe has cultivated close ties with President Donald Trump this year in a bid to keep the US alliance strong amid growing unease over North Korea’s ballistic missiles. He’s seeking the first-ever change to the 70year-old pacifist constituti­on to affirm the legality of Japan’s Self-Defense Forces.

Abe called the election more than a year early in apparent bid to capitalise on fears over North Korea and a weakened opposition. The Constituti­onal Democratic Party, running second in most polls, was set up only about two weeks ago by former Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano after its predecesso­r split up. Other opposition lawmakers defected to populist Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike’s upstart Party of Hope.

The CDP has adopted a center-left agenda, with pledges to increase the minimum wage and resist attempts to revise the constituti­on. Koike’s Hope party is closer to Abe’s LDP on many issues, though has criticised him over cronyism scandals that hurt his popularity earlier this year.

“It will be a victory by default for Prime Minister Abe,” said Tobias Harris, a Japan analyst at Teneo Intelligen­ce in Washington. “The LDP is going to win most of the single-district seats, but the proportion­al representa­tion section is where it gets more interestin­g. The CDP could have a surprising­ly strong result.”

If the ruling coalition performs well, the LDP may keep Abe as its leader in a party election next September. This could open the way for him to stay on as prime minister until 2021.

The general election on Sunday is the first to be held since the legal voting age was changed to 18. Turnout may be hurt by a typhoon on course for the south of the country.

Voting opens at 7 am and closes at 8 pm, when major domestic media outlets will publish the results of their exit polls. In the past, those polls have accurately predicted the outcome.

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 ?? REUTERS ?? Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during an election campaign rally in Fukushima, Japan
REUTERS Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe during an election campaign rally in Fukushima, Japan
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