The Borneo Post

Politics is faster, more effective in Japan’s capital, new governor says

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TOKYO: Popular Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike is often spoken of as a candidate to become Japan’s first female prime minister — but for now, the former lawmaker is having too much fun as top leader of the capital, where she says she can get things done.

Koike, who defied Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party ( LDP) to run successful­ly for the job last year, was virtually tied for third place in a recent poll that ranked politician­s as prime ministeria­l material.

Abe, his popularity battered by suspected scandals and voter perception­s of having grown arrogant in office, came in a close second, behind a former LDP cabinet minister, Shigeru Ishiba.

“For 24 years I was in national politics and became disappoint­ed, so now I’m doing speedier, more effective politics in the metropolit­an government,” Koike said, when asked if she would consider returning to parliament after running Tokyo, with an economy bigger than many countries and a population that tops 13 million.

“Being governor is completely different from being just one of many members of parliament. I am able to implement various policies I’ve had in mind,” Koike, 65, told Reuters in an interview, but stopped short of closing the door on a future run at the premiershi­p.

Koike’s Tokyo Citizens First party dealt the LDP a historic defeat in a metropolit­an assembly election last month, spurring talk it could evolve into a national party to field candidates in a general elect ion that must be held by late 2018.

Moves are already afoot among some lawmakers who see an opportunit­y to create a new ‘Japan First’ political party, given the failure of the main opposition Democratic Party to repair its image, battered by a rocky 20092012 tenure.

“I think they are acting from necessity. There are lawmakers who think that LDP politics are insufficie­nt,” Koike said.

A former defence and environmen­t minister, Koike said the central government was too tepid on reform and too slow to make decisions.

“In cases where the central government takes too much time, I want the metropolis of Tokyo to be able to act,” she added.

As an example, Koike said she plans to introduce an anti-smoking ban in the Japanese capital before the 2020 Olympics.

Efforts for a national ban on smoking in public died in parliament this year, opposed by many pro-smoking politician­s in the LDP, restaurate­urs and Japan Tobacco, a third of which is stateowned. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Koike speaks during an interview with Reuters at Tokyo Metropolit­an Government Building.
Koike speaks during an interview with Reuters at Tokyo Metropolit­an Government Building.

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