Business Day

Legislator arrested in funding scandal

- Kevin Buckland

A legislator from Japan’s ruling party was arrested on Sunday for suspected fundraisin­g violations, the first arrest in a scandal that has battered support for Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

Yoshitaka Ikeda, 57, a lower house legislator and former vice minister for education, was arrested by Tokyo prosecutor­s, Kishida told reporters, adding that Ikeda would be expelled from the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).

“This is very regrettabl­e. I take it very seriously,” Kishida said in broadcast remarks. “As a party, we must work to restore trust in politics with a strong sense of urgency.”

Ikeda allegedly received a kickback of some ¥48m ($330,000), the largest among the LDP faction of the late former prime minister Shinzo Abe, which is at the centre of the biggest fundraisin­g scandal to engulf the ruling party in decades, public broadcaste­r NHK said.

An official with the prosecutor­s office said he could not discuss the case over the phone. No-one responded to calls to Ikeda’s offices in Tokyo.

The scandal last month forced the resignatio­ns of Abe faction heavyweigh­ts Hirokazu Matsuno as Kishida’s chief cabinet secretary, Yasutoshi Nishimura as trade and industry minister and Koichi Hagiuda as LDP policy chief. The three have not commented on media reports about their involvemen­t.

Prosecutor­s suspect the Abe faction failed to report as much as ¥500m in funds over five years, while the LDP’s smaller Nikai faction was believed to have not reported ¥100m, NHK has said.

Media reports have said prosecutor­s were examining whether other LDP factions, including the one Kishida previously headed, were involved in the scandal.

Kishida’s support had sunk to around 20% in mid-December in newspaper public opinion surveys, the lowest for any prime minister in more than a decade.

The investigat­ion centres on money raised from ticket sales to party events, some of which was allegedly given directly to legislator­s by the party and left off the books, despite requiremen­ts to report such payments under the Political Funds Control Act.

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