The Sentinel-Record

Japanese Prime Minister Abe heads to impressive election win

- KEN MORITSUGU The Associated Press

TOKYO — Japan’s ruling coalition appeared headed to an impressive win in national elections on Sunday, in what would represent an endorsemen­t for Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s nearly fiveyear leadership.

A victory would boost Abe’s chances of winning another three-year term next September as leader of the Liberal Democratic Party. That could extend his premiershi­p to

2021, giving him more time to try to win a reluctant public over to his longtime goal of revising

Japan’s pacifist constituti­on.

In the imme- diate term, a victory likely means a continuati­on of the policies Abe has pursued in the nearly five years since he took office in December 2012 — a hard line on North Korea, close ties with Washington, including defense, as well as a super-loose monetary policy and push for nuclear energy.

Japanese media projected shortly after polls closed that Abe’s LDP and its junior partner Komeito might even retain their two-thirds majority in the lower house of parliament.

In unofficial results in the early hours of Monday, the ruling coalition had won 312 seats in the

465-seat lower house, exceeding a two-thirds majority at 310, and other parties had 143 seats, Japanese public broadcaste­r NHK said. Final results may not be tallied until Monday.

Abe’s ruling coalition already has a two-thirds majority in the less powerful upper house. Having the supermajor­ity in both houses virtually gives them a free hand in pushing even divisive policies and legislatio­n.

Abe said the results indicate that voters support his policies and want to see his political leadership continue.

“I think the results reflected the voters’ preference for a solid political foundation and their expectatio­ns for us to push polices forward and achieve results,” Abe told NHK.

Abe’s support ratings had fallen to around 30 percent in the summer after accusation­s of government favoritism to people connected to him, sparking talk that he might be vulnerable as leader of his party and prime minister.

“I will humbly face the victory and continue to work humbly and sincerely,” he told NHK, noting lingering public distrust over the scandals.

Abe dissolved the lower house less than a month ago, forcing the snap election. The lower house chooses the prime minister and is the more powerful of the two chambers of parliament.

Analysts saw Abe’s move as an attempt to solidify his political standing at a time when the opposition was in disarray and his support ratings had improved somewhat.

His plan was briefly upstaged by the launch of a new opposition party by populist Tokyo Gov. Yuriko Koike. But initial excitement faded and Koike herself decided not to run for parliament.

NHK projected that her Party of Hope so far has won just 49 seats.

Koike called the results “very severe” in a televised interview from Paris, where she is attending a conference of mayors. She said some of her remarks might have been taken negatively by voters, and that she would take the blame.

Projection­s indicated that another new party, the Constituti­onal Democratic Party of Japan, could outpoll the Party of Hope and become the biggest opposition grouping. The Constituti­onal Democrats are liberal-leaning, while both the Party of Hope and Abe’s Liberal Democratic Party are more conservati­ve.

Abe’s party and its nationalis­t supporters have advocated constituti­onal revisions for years. They view the 1947 constituti­on as the legacy of Japan’s defeat in World War II and an imposition of the victor’s world order and values. The charter renounces the use of force in internatio­nal conflicts and limits Japan’s troops to self-defense, although Japan has a well-equipped modern military that works closely with the U.S.

Any change to Japan’s constituti­on, which has never been amended, requires approval first by two-thirds of parliament, and then in a public referendum. Polls indicate that the Japanese public remains opposed to amendment.

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