The Star Malaysia

Snap polls for Japan

PM capitalisi­ng on weakened opposition and voter approval

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PM seeks fresh term as tensions with nearby North Korea reach fever-pitch.

TOKYO: Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe called a snap election, seeking a fresh term at the helm of the world’s third largest economy as tensions with nearby North Korea reach fever-pitch.

Abe hopes to capitalise on a weak and fractured opposition to sweep back into power, as polls show him regaining ground after a series of scandals.

“I will dissolve the House of Representa­tives on the 28th” of September, Abe told reporters, a precursor to a general election. The prime minister did not give a date for the election but it will reportedly be on Oct 22.

Surveys suggest voters approve of the hardline stance taken by the nationalis­t Abe on North Korea, which fired two missiles over the country in the space of a month and has threatened to “sink” Japan.

According to a weekend poll in business daily Nikkei, 44% of voters plan to vote for Abe’s conservati­ve Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), while only 8% favoured the main opposition Democratic Party.

Neverthele­ss, one-fifth of those polled said they were still undecided, potentiall­y opening the door for gains by a new party formed by allies of the popular mayor of Tokyo Yuriko Koike, which will field dozens of candidates.

Koike’s Tomin First no Kai (Tokyo Residents First) party humiliated Abe and the LDP in local elections in July, but ana- lysts say the new grouping has not had time to lay a national foundation to mount a serious challenge to the prime minister.

In an apparent bid to steal Abe’s limelight, Koike went before the cameras just hours before his announceme­nt to announce she was creating a national political party called “Kibo no To” (Party of Hope).

“Japan is facing a difficult time considerin­g the situation in North Korea. Economical­ly, the world is making a big move while Japan’s presence is gradually declining,” said Koike.

“Can we continue letting (the existing lawmakers) handle politics?”

But Jeff Kingston, director of Asian Studies at Temple University in Japan, said there was “no opposition worthy of the name in Japan”.

“The LDP is a giant among dwarves. It would take a major scandal to derail the Abe express,” said the analyst.

The winner of the expected snap election faces a daunting in-tray of challenges ranging from an unpreceden­ted crisis with North Korea to reviving the once world-beating Japanese economy.

Although Abe is expected to triumph, there are question marks over whether he will retain a two-thirds parliament­ary majority needed to reform the constituti­on to strengthen Japan’s military, one of his stated priorities. — AFP

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