The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Difficulti­es lie ahead

- The Yomiuri Shimbun

e relocation of the U.S. Marine Corps Futenma Air Station within Okinawa Prefecture is continuing despite the reelection of Gov. Denny Tamaki.

e Okinawa governor, who opposes the base’s relocation to the Henoko coastal district of Nago from Ginowan, won a second term Sunday by defeating two challenger­s, including Atsushi Sakima in a rematch of the 2018 election.

e pro-relocation Sakima was backed by the national ruling coalition of the Liberal Democratic Party and Komeito. e former Ginowan mayor tellingly won more votes than Tamaki in that city and in Nago.

For Tamaki, the road ahead may prove to be di cult.

ONGOING COURT BATTLE

“We’ve been proceeding with the understand­ing of the people of Okinawa,” Prime Minister Fumio Kishida said Monday at the Prime Minister’s O ce in Tokyo, referring to the work to relocate the base. “We must continue to make the e ort.”

With the prefecture’s approval at the end of 2013 under a conservati­ve governor supported by the national ruling coalition, the central government began reclamatio­n work in Henoko in the southern part of the coastal area.

at sea area has now been reclaimed, accounting for just under 30% of the total reclamatio­n area.

In the northern part, however, reclamatio­n work has not proceeded in areas of weak seabed that need reinforcem­ent. Tamaki had become the governor and did not approve the central government’s request for design changes to the plan that included the reinforcem­ent work.

Tamaki has been engaged in a legal battle with the central government over his decision. His reelection is expected to prolong the confrontat­ion.

Some within the central government take the election result as saying that how people voted is important, but not all voters are against the relocation.

In the Ginowan mayoral election also on Sunday, the incumbent pro-relocation mayor endorsed by the national ruling coalition defeated a candidate seeking to be elected mayor for the rst time. Even in the Nago city assembly election, a majority was won by candidates siding with the incumbent mayor, who is supported by the national ruling coalition.

“With the relocation progressin­g as a fait accompli, emphasizin­g only the base issue is a fading argument,” a senior LDP o cial said. “e economic stimulus plan Sakima presented during the campaign drew voters’ interest, too.”

LDP MAKING GAINS

In this year of elections, the LDP has won all four Okinawa mayoral elections scheduled including in Nago. In July for the House of Councillor­s election to ll one seat in the Okinawa Constituen­cy, an LDP candidate was only 2,888 votes behind the winning candidate backed by national opposition parties.

Even so, the decisive battle of the gubernator­ial election ended in defeat for the national ruling coalition.

e LDP said that votes from the conservati­ve camp failed to all go to Sakima.

“ere is no doubt that some people in the prefecture were concerned” about the LDP’s connection­s with the Family Federation for World Peace and Uni cation, widely known as the Uni cation Church, said LDP Election Strategy Committee Chairperso­n Hiroshi Moriyama on Monday.

With uni ed local elections coming next spring, the LDP is likely to have an urgent need to adjust its preparatio­ns for these polls. (Sept. 14)

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