Abe reshuffles Japan Cabinet
TOKYO, Oct 2, (AP): Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe reshuffled his Cabinet on Tuesday, retaining key diplomatic and economy posts as Japan tackles tough trade talks with the US.
Abe was re-elected in September to head the Liberal Democratic Party for a third term, paving the way to serve as Japan’s leader for up to three more years.
Tuesday’s reshuffle, Abe’s fourth since taking office in 2012, kept Foreign Minister Taro Kono, Finance Minister Taro Aso, Economy Minister Toshimitsu Motegi and Trade Minister Hiroshige Seko – core members of Abe’s government who have worked on tough negotiations on trade and other issues with their increasingly demanding American counterparts.
For defense minister, Abe appointed Takeshi Iwaya, a ruling party national security expert who is expected to follow the ongoing policy seeking Japan’s greater military role.
“I will pursue economic and diplomatic policies built on a stable foundation after five years and nine months of accomplishment,” Abe told a news conference Tuesday.
Abe has to re-solidify his grip on power in the party after his weakerthan-expected showing in the leadership election. He renewed more than half of the 19 Cabinet members, mostly his confidantes and supporters, to help his push for a constitutional revision, though hurdles remain high. Among them is Satsuki Katayama, the only woman in the Cabinet, appointed as local revitalization and gender equality minister.
Abe, 64, has said he is determined to use his last term to pursue his long-sought amendment to Japan’s US-drafted pacifist constitution that many conservatives see as a humiliation imposed on Japan following its World War II defeat.
Abe said his party is working to submit a draft revision to parliament later this year and that he appointed Hakubun Shimomura, an ultra-conservative former education minister, to head the effort.