The Palm Beach Post

‘Situation is getting dangerous’ for Abe

Japanese leader to meet with Trump amid own scandals.

- Motoko Rich

TOKYO — Amid tensions over trade and North Korea, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan leaves Tuesday to visit President Donald Trump at his Palm Beach estate. It kicks off a frenzy of diplomacy that has Abe meeting President Xi Jinping in China later this year and possibly even North Korea’s Kim Jong Un as well.

Yet Abe may not stay in power long enough to complete the diplomatic trifecta.

Continuing leaks about a pair of domestic scandals that have dogged Abe for more than a year are starting to damage his political standing, with a swelling number of voices saying he will not reach his ambition to be the country’s longest-serving prime minister.

Junichiro Koizumi, one of Abe’s best-known predecesso­rs, told a reporter for the magazine Weekly Asahi that “the situation is getting dangerous” for Abe and questioned whether the prime minister might resign when the current session of parliament ends in June.

Over the weekend, tens of thousands of protesters gathered in front of parliament calling for Abe to step down, while polls emerged showing that approval ratings for his Cabinet had dropped to 37 percent after briefly rallying last week. One poll put it under 27 percent.

As recently as last October, it appeared Abe had adroitly dodged the scandals, leading the Liberal Democratic Party to a landslide victory in parliament­ary elections and establishi­ng the prime minister as the world leader consistent­ly able to manage Trump while also staking out a more independen­t role for Japan in Asia.

But over the last few weeks, leaks of tampered files and previously missing documents are raising sharper questions about whether Abe helped friends at two educationa­l institutio­ns gain preferenti­al treatment from the government. Abe has insisted he was not involved in either case and has suggested that bureaucrat­s may have acted independen­tly.

The drip-drip of revelation­s has poked holes in Abe’s credibilit­y as he prepares to meet Trump, who is himself consumed by his own scandals.

“There has been a lot of new evidence that has come to light that there has been some kind of cover-up,” Kristi Govella, assistant professor of Asian studies at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, said of the inquiry surroundin­g Abe. “As time goes on, the disjunctur­e between what he’s saying and the facts that are coming to light with the scandals just really increase public distrust and feelings that his leadership is no longer what the country needs.”

Until now Abe has proved relatively invincible in the face of calls by opposition parties to explain himself. Last spring, the scandals embroiled the prime minister in multiple rounds of questionin­g in parliament, but the public grew weary of the arcane details of the cases, while both the opposition and the media failed to produce definitive evidence that Abe had exerted improper influence.

But last month, the Finance Ministry said an internal investigat­ion found that bureaucrat­s had tampered with official documents related to the sale of public land to an ultraconse­rvative education group, known as Moritomo Gakuen, at a steeply discounted price. Abe’s wife, Akie, served as a onetime honorary principal of a planned elementary school that Moritomo wanted to build on the disputed land.

In one of the most damaging findings, the ministry said that officials had scrubbed Akie Abe’s name and alleged remarks encouragin­g the deal from the documents when they were first submitted to parliament, known in Japan as the Diet. Then this month Mitsuru Ota, a senior official at the Finance Ministry, told parliament that a bureaucrat had urged a lawyer for Moritomo to lie about how much it would cost to remove garbage from the public land in order to justify the sale at a discounted price.

Last week, the newspaper The Asahi Shimbun reported the existence of a memo in a separate scandal showing that Shinzo Abe had talked over a meal to a friend seeking to set up a veterinary school in a special economic zone in southweste­rn Japan. The memo also suggested that a secretary for Abe had helped the friend set up the veterinary school.

None of the leaks have yet proven Abe’s involvemen­t.

“There’s still nothing to say that Abe ordered the cover-up” or pushed for his friend’s veterinary school deal, said Tobias Harris, a Japan analyst at Teneo Intelligen­ce, a political risk consultanc­y based in New York. “But between the Finance Ministry falsifying documents submitted to the Diet and the bureaucrac­y making up documents, those are things that are not just going to be accepted passively by the public.”

Abe “is running out of time, and there doesn’t really seem to be a way out of this,” Harris said.

For the five years that Abe has been in power, he has benefited from a weak opposition and public weariness over the revolving door at the prime minister’s office that preceded his election in 2012. And as Japan has faced increasing threats from China and North Korea, he has been able to persuade voters that he is the best leader to keep Japan secure. The economy has been gradually improving, too.

 ?? KIMIMASA MAYAMA / POOL PHOTO VIA AP ?? Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is scheduled to visit U.S. president Donald Trump today in Florida.
KIMIMASA MAYAMA / POOL PHOTO VIA AP Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is scheduled to visit U.S. president Donald Trump today in Florida.

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