San Francisco Chronicle

New prime minister sticks with old guard

- By Motoko Rich Motoko Rich is a New York Times writer.

TOKYO — Japan’s governing party resisted any urge to pick a magnetic crowdpleas­er when it anointed Yoshihide Suga as its leader this week. As Parliament officially elected him prime minister Wednesday, he repaid its support.

Suga, 71, put forward an everyoneol­disnewagai­n Cabinet dominated by ministers who will continue in the jobs they held under Shinzo Abe, who resigned as prime minister late last month because of ill health. The sea of familiar faces sent an unmistakab­le signal that Suga intends to make good on his vow to carry on with Abe’s signature policies.

But it also seemed to shut the door on one of them: a pledge — though a largely unfulfille­d one — to empower women. The number of women in the Cabinet will actually decline to two from three. Both of them held the same posts in the previous administra­tion.

Above all, Suga’s status quo Cabinet, as well as his appointmen­ts of key party leaders, suggested that he was rewarding those who had helped him become prime minister, which was orchestrat­ed by factions within his conservati­ve Liberal Democratic Party.

In important positions, Suga kept Taro Aso, a former prime minister and one of the party’s kingmakers, as finance minister and Toshimitsu Motegi, Japan’s most senior diplomat, as foreign minister.

On the issue of women in the Cabinet, Suga’s failure to increase their numbers, some analysts said, reflected the fact that there are simply not enough women in the Liberal Democratic Party overall. Ten percent of party lawmakers are women, and Suga gave ministeria­l roles to two of them: Yoko Kamikawa, the justice minister, and Seiko Hashimoto, the minister for the Olympics.

But others say that Suga and the Liberal Democrats are simply not committed to gender equality.

 ?? Jiji Press /AFP / Getty Images ?? Yoshihide Suga bows to Emperor Naruhito after being installed as Japan’s new prime minister.
Jiji Press /AFP / Getty Images Yoshihide Suga bows to Emperor Naruhito after being installed as Japan’s new prime minister.

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