The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Quartet of candidates presents views in LDP presidenti­al race

- By Masashi Nakata and Hiroki Takao Yomiuri Shimbun Staff Writers

The four candidates in the Liberal Democratic Party’s presidenti­al race switched into gear when campaignin­g officially started on Friday, with novel coronaviru­s measures and economic revival at the forefront of election issues.

All of the candidates gave speeches at LDP headquarte­rs on the day.

“I want you to entrust Japan’s coronaviru­s response [to me],” said Taro Kono, the administra­tive and regulatory reform minister.

Kono, who has been supervisin­g vaccine distributi­on in the Cabinet of Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, expressed his pride at having played a key role in the nation’s battle against the pandemic.

Kono stressed the importance of developing a digital system to speed up the payment of government handouts to restaurant­s and other establishm­ents that comply with requests to suspend operations or shorten opening hours to mitigate the spread of infections.

The other candidates also touted pandemic proposals.

Former LDP Policy Research Council Chairperso­n Fumio Kishida called for the establishm­ent of a health crisis management agency to function as a control tower.

“The cooperatio­n of the general public is essential in the fight against the coronaviru­s,” he said.

Kishida promised to “carefully explain the process leading to decisions,” a remark that could be interprete­d as a veiled reference to Suga, who has been criticized for his lack of explanatio­ns regarding infection measures.

Former Internal Affairs and Communicat­ions Minister Sanae Takaichi called for investment to “swiftly develop domestic vaccines and drugs, and production facilities.”

LDP Executive Acting Secretary General Seiko Noda proposed creating temporary hospitals to increase the number of beds for COVID-19 patients.

All four candidates expressed their understand­ing of the government’s recently announced proposal regarding the easing of restrictio­ns on social activities.

Kishida said he would create an environmen­t that would prevent the collapse of the medical system and aim to “restore social and economic activities to near normal levels as soon as possible.”

Kono expressed his willingnes­s to supply a large number of simple test kits. “If they are used at events and schools, it will open up various possibilit­ies,” he said.

At Friday’s joint press conference, Takaichi said she would “do what can be done to move the economy forward,” by pushing ahead with vaccinatio­ns and the developmen­t of COVID-19 treatments.

Noda said: “There are many diseases.

We must not stop the economy.”

Regarding economic policy, Takaichi called for further accelerati­on of the Abenomics policy package advocated by former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, while Kishida and Kono proposed some revisions.

Takaichi, who is backed by Abe, is calling for the developmen­t of Abenomics under a new name: “Sanaenomic­s.”

She has proposed replacing growth strategy, one of the three arrows of Abenomics, with investment, stressing the need to promote investment in crisis management and advanced technology.

Kishida’s key policy is a Reiwa-era version of the income-doubling plan to boost the income of middle-income earners. The plan was originally launched in 1960 by then Prime Minister Hayato Ikeda, who establishe­d the Kochikai faction, a predecesso­r of the Kishida faction.

Like the Suga Cabinet, Kono has positioned accelerati­ng digitizati­on and decarboniz­ation as growth areas, expressing hope that renewable energy “becomes a new seed for Japanese industry.”

He also said, “nuclear power plants will eventually disappear,” and that “running the country on 100% renewable energy won’t be an empty wish.” (Sept. 19)

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