The Palm Beach Post

Japan’s ruling bloc keeps supermajor­ity

Victory bolsters prime minister’s political standing.

- By Adam Taylor Washington Post

TOKYO — Prime Minister Shinzo Abe secured a crucial victory in Japan’s parliament­ary elections on Sunday, with his ruling bloc maintainin­g a supermajor­ity that could allow it to push for a revision of the nation’s pacifist constituti­on.

With results still trickling in, public broadcaste­r NHK reported that Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party and its smaller coalition partner, Komeito, are set to pass the 310-seat threshold in the 465-seat House of Representa­tives.

The result further illustrate­s the political savvy of 63-year-old Abe, who has proved to be an enduring force in Japanese politics despite scandals and fluctuatin­g approval ratings.

“This is a win for Abe,” Sheila Smith, a Japan expert at the Council on Foreign Relations, adding that the supermajor­ity showed “a real endorsemen­t of Abe’s leadership”

The decisive victory will bolster Abe’s hopes in an upcoming leadership contest within his party, potentiall­y cementing the prime minister’s place in history. If Abe serves out a complete fouryear term, he will remain at the helm during the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games and become Japan’s longest-serving prime minister.

However, any attempt to amend Japan’s postwar constituti­on may end up being Abe’s most controvers­ial legacy.

With Sunday’s vote, Abe and his allies have retained the two-thirds majorities in both houses of parliament that are required to call for constituti­onal amendments.

Abe has long sought to revise Article 9, which renounces war, and remove the ambiguity surroundin­g Japan’s military, known as the Self-Defense Forces.

While many conservati­ves view the amendment as overdue, many voters remain skeptical.

South Korea and China, which neighbor Japan, also are nervous about what they see as the potential return of a militarist­ic Japan.

In an interview with NHK after polls closed, Abe said he would push for an amendment. “The ruling parties have been granted a majority,” Abe said. “I think it was the people’s voice telling us to make progress in politics and bring results with a stable political base.”

For a leader touting stability, the election had been a gamble.

Abe had called the vote more than a year early, justifying it by saying that he needed a new mandate to deal with the threat posed by North Korea and to work through the details of a consumptio­n tax increase.

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 ?? SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI / AP ?? Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, leader of the Liberal Democratic Party, has proven an enduring force in Japanese politics. A decisive parliament­ary election win bolsters his hopes in a looming leadership challenge within his own party.
SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI / AP Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, leader of the Liberal Democratic Party, has proven an enduring force in Japanese politics. A decisive parliament­ary election win bolsters his hopes in a looming leadership challenge within his own party.

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