The Borneo Post

Abe on course for landslide win in Japan vote – Poll

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TOKYO: Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is on track for a landslide win in Japan’s upcoming election, the latest survey suggested yesterday, as a new party founded by Tokyo’s popular governor loses momentum.

Abe’s conservati­ve Liberal Democratic Party ( LDP) is projected to win as many as 303 of the 465 seats up for grabs in the October 22 election, according to a poll by the Mainichi Shimbun.

Its junior coalition partner Komeito is expected to gain more than 30 seats, allowing Abe’s ruling camp to have a comfortabl­e two-thirds majority in the powerful lower house, the poll suggested.

A two-thirds majority in parliament would allow Abe, 63, to push through an amendment to Japan’s pacifist constituti­on.

The hawkish premier has called for changes to the USimposed law so Japan can turn its self- defence forces into a fullfledge­d army.

Support for Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike’s newly founded Party of Hope, which has transforme­d Japan’s political landscape and swallowed up the main opposition Democratic Party, appears to be declining, with surveys predicting it might win up to 54 seats.

After an initial burst of support for the media- savvy Koike, critics say the Tokyo governor has suffered by not running herself in the election, meaning voters for her party are not sure who they are electing as PM.

“Expectatio­ns were high but the Party of Hope has nothing but Koike’s popularity,” said Koji Nakakita, professor of politics at Hitotsubas­hi University in Tokyo.

“Support for Abe’s cabinet is not so high but voters have no choice but to vote for Abe’s LDP,” Nakakita told AFP, with the opposition parties facing ‘confusion and divisions’.

The 12- day election campaign has focused on reviving Japan’s once world- beating economy and tackling the ever-present threat of North Korea which has threatened to ‘sink’ the country into the sea.

“This is an election to question how we can protect our people’s lives and good living from North Korea’s threats,” Abe said at a campaign rally in the northern city of Hokkaido on Sunday.

Abe is seeking a fresh term at the helm of the Asian economic powerhouse and key US ally and unexpected­ly called a snap election to capitalise on a weak and fractured opposition.

But Koike, 65, stole his limelight by launching her party, attacking Abe’s government for being too slow to reform the country, weighed down by an ageing population, de f l at ion and a huge debt mountain.

— AFP

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