The Scotsman

Abe campaigns on North Korea threat in snap Japan election

- By MARI YAMAGUCHI newdeskts@scotsman.com

Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe took to the streets after calling a snap election, telling voters only he could protect them from the threat of North Korean missiles.

Mr Abe, of the Liberal Democratic Party, also told a crowd in Tokyo’s busy Shibuya district that only his party can implement appropriat­e measures to deal with Japan’s rapidly ageing and declining population.

“I must seek your support in order to overcome this national crisis,” Mr Abe said.

The premier dissolved the lower house of parliament yesterday, calling an election on 22 October.

Opposition politician­s scrambled to regroup around Tokyo governor Yuriko Koike’s new party to challenge Mr Abe’s ruling party.

Mr Abe is widely seen as trying to reconsolid­ate his grip on power within his party, so he can extend the term of his premiershi­p next year.

The dissolutio­n of the more powerful of japan’ s two-chamber parliament comes more than a year before required by law.

However, the ruling party faces a growing challenge from a new party launched by Ms Koike this week.

The Party of Hope has energised some voters, and is gaining renegade politician­s from the main opposition party.

The speaker of the house, Tadamori Oshima, read the statement of dissolutio­n.

Lower house members all stood up and chanted “banzai” three times in a dissolutio­n ritual, then rushed out of the assembly hall.

Minutes after the dissolutio­n, Mr Abe made a fiery speech to party members.

He said he is seeking a public mandate on his tougher diplomatic and defence policies to deal with escalating threats from North Korea and that his party members would have to relay his message to gain support from voters during the campaign.

“This election is about how we protect Japan, the people’s lives and peaceful daily life,” he said. “The election is about the future of our children.”

The Cabinet later approved a 22 October election for the 475-seat lower house.

The other chamber, the upper house, does not dissolve but is closed until parliament is reconvened after the election.

Support ratings for Mr Abe’s government had plunged to below 30 percent in July following repeated parliament­aryquestio­ns about allegation­s he helped his friend obtain approval to open a veterinary college.

Recent media polls show the support ratings recovering to around 50 per cent, helped by parliament’s recess and a Cabinet reshuffle in August.

 ??  ?? 0 Protesters outside parliament after Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe dissolved the lower house, paving the way for a snap election on 22 October
0 Protesters outside parliament after Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe dissolved the lower house, paving the way for a snap election on 22 October

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