Cape Breton Post

Japan likely heading for Oct. 17 election

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TOKYO —The Japanese government is considerin­g holding a general election on Oct. 17, Kyodo news said on Monday citing government sources, even as public support for Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga hits record lows in two new opinion polls.

Suga has failed to capitalize on delivering the Olympics for the country, currently being hit hard by a fresh wave of coronaviru­s infections. The government has declared a fourth state of emergency in most of the country amid a sluggish vaccinatio­n rollout.

The Mainichi newspaper poll showed public support for Suga had slid below 30 per cent for the first time, to a dismal 26 per cent. The Nikkei daily put his ratings at 34 per cent, in line with a record low hit in its survey last month.

If the general election plan is approved at a cabinet meeting, it would mean Suga will not call a snap election but instead allow the members of the lower house of parliament to serve out their full terms.

But before the general election takes place, Suga faces a challenge for the leadership of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), due for Sept. 29, whose winner is all but assured of being premier due to the LDP's majority in the lower house.

Public support ratings are watched particular­ly closely because the new party chief will lead the LDP in the general election.

One of the polls showed that Suga's possible rivals for the party leader job, such as Administra­tive Reform Minister Taro Kono, in charge of Japan's vaccinatio­n push, and former defence minister Shigeru Ishiba, were more popular with the public.

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